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What are operators in JavaScript?

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In JavaScript (and programming in general), operators are used to assign or compare values, perform arithmetic operations, evaluate expressions, and more.

JavaScript supports the following operators:

Arithmetic Operators

Arithmetic operators use numeric values as their operands and return a single numerical value.

Comparison Operators

A comparison operator is a binary operator that takes two operands and compares their values.

//arithmetic operators
console.log(2+2);
console.log(8*3);
console.log(17%3);
//comparison operators
console.log(2==2);
console.log(2>9);
console.log(6>=6);
console.log(7<=5);

Logical (or Relational) Operators

A logical operator is used to determine the logic between two expressions. It takes in two operands and produces a single logical value. It returns a Boolean value if used with Boolean operands and vice versa.

For example, the && operator evaluates in the following way:

Operand 1 Operand 2 Result
True True True
True False False
False True True
False False False

Assignment Operators

An assignment operator is the operator used to provide a new value to the left operand according to the value of the right operand.

Conditional (or Ternary) Operators

Conditional operators are used in evaluating a condition and return a value based on the evaluation of the condition. It is usually used as a shortcut to the if condition.

       condition ? exp1 : exp2 

It takes three operands and returns the value of exp1 if the condition is true and the value of exp2 if the condition is false.

// logical operators
console.log(true&&true);
console.log((2==2)&&false);
console.log((2<12)&& (9>=9));
//assignment operators
var a=5*5;
var b=2!=2;
console.log(a);
console.log(b);
a*=2; //multiplying a by 2 and assigning the result to a
console.log(a);
//conditional(ternary operator)
var c=(5<2)? "5 is less than 2":"5 is not less than 2.";
console.log(c);

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