@[email protected] to Programmer [email protected]English • 2 years agoOur social interaction in a nutshelllemmy.mlimagemessage-square23fedilinkarrow-up1678arrow-down129
arrow-up1649arrow-down1imageOur social interaction in a nutshelllemmy.ml@[email protected] to Programmer [email protected]English • 2 years agomessage-square23fedilink
minus-squareZagorathlinkfedilinkEnglish28•2 years agoMost languages support concatenation of strings using the + operator. The only mainstream languages I can think of that don’t are PHP (which uses “.”) and low-level languages like C & C++.
minus-squareVanillaGorillalinkfedilink23•2 years agoJavaScript might even concatenate some integers instead of adding them just for shits and giggles.
minus-squareRikudou_Sagelinkfedilink7•2 years agoC++ does as well, doesn’t it? Though I don’t often use std::string, so I’m not sure. But every other string type I worked with had + overloaded.
minus-squareZagorathlinkfedilinkEnglish1•2 years agoI dunno, I’ve never actually worked in C++, but I tried it out online and it didn’t seem to work.
Most languages support concatenation of strings using the + operator. The only mainstream languages I can think of that don’t are PHP (which uses “.”) and low-level languages like C & C++.
JavaScript might even concatenate some integers instead of adding them just for shits and giggles.
R uses
paste0()
for some reasonLua uses
..
C++ does as well, doesn’t it? Though I don’t often use std::string, so I’m not sure. But every other string type I worked with had + overloaded.
I dunno, I’ve never actually worked in C++, but I tried it out online and it didn’t seem to work.