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Operators in TorqueScript behave very similarly to operators in real world math and other programming languages. You should recognize quite a few of these from math classes you took in school, but with small syntactical changes. The rest of this section will explain the syntax and show a brief example, but we will cover these in depth in later guides.
Basic math operations are supported using a syntax clear to everyone. TorqueScript supports multiplication, division, modulo, addition, and subtraction. Additionally, standard auto-increment and auto-decrement operations are available:
Example:
// Multiplication %product = 3*4; // results in 12 // Division %quotient = 4/2; // results in 2 // Modulo %mod = 5%2; // results in 1 // Addition %sum = 3+4; // results in 7 // Subtraction %difference = 4-3; // results in 1 // Auto-increment %value = 3; %incr = %value++; // results in 4; //Auto-decrement %value = 3; %decre = %value--; // results in 2;
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Relational operators are used for comparing values and variables against each other. Again, the syntax for these operatations closely resemble real world math. The value returned from a comparison will always be true(1) or false(0).
Example:
// Greater than if(4 > 3) echo("True. 3 is not greater than 4"); // Greater than or equal to if(3 >= 3) echo("True. 3 is equal to or greater than 3"); // Equal to if(6 == 6); echo("True. 6 is exactly equal to 6"); // Not equal to if(3 != 5) echo("True. 3 is not equal to 5");
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Bitwise operations are used for comparing and shifting the bits of a value.
Examples:
// Bitwise NOT/complement. Unary operation that flips bits. %value = 101; %bitValue = ~%value; // results in 101 becoming 010 // Bitwise AND. When applied to two binary values, resulting bits are 1 if original pairs were 1 %valueOne = 0101; %valueTwo = 0011; %bitValue = %valueOne&%valueTwo; // Results in 0001
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Assignment operators are used for setting the value of a variable. You should recognize it as the "equals" sign.
Example:
%val = 3; // Assigns the value of 3 to the %val variable %val = 3+4; // Assigns the value of 3+4 to the %val variable %val += 3; // Assigns the %val variable the value of 3 plus itself
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There are special values you can use to concatenate strings and variables. Concatenation refers to the joining of multiple values into a single variable. The following is the basic syntax:
"string 1" operation "string 2"
You can use string operators similarly to how you use mathematical operators (=, +, -, *). You have four operators at your disposal: @ NL TAB SPC. For example, the @ symbol will concatenate two strings together exactly how you specify, without adding any additional whitespace.
Example:
%newString = "Hello" @ "World"; echo(%newString); // OUPUT: HelloWorld
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Full Reference