C Operator Precedence
The following table lists the precedence and associativity of C operators. Operators are listed top to bottom, in descending precedence.
| Precedence | Operator | Description | Associativity | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |  ++ --
 | 
Suffix/postfix increment and decrement | Left-to-right | 
 ()
 | 
Function call | ||
 []
 | 
Array subscripting | ||
 .
 | 
Structure and union member access | ||
 ->
 | 
Structure and union member access through pointer | ||
 (type){list}
 | 
Compound literal(C99) | ||
| 2 |  ++ --
 | 
Prefix increment and decrement | Right-to-left | 
 + -
 | 
Unary plus and minus | ||
 ! ~
 | 
Logical NOT and bitwise NOT | ||
 (type)
 | 
Type cast | ||
 *
 | 
Indirection (dereference) | ||
 &
 | 
Address-of | ||
 sizeof
 | 
Size-of | ||
 _Alignof
 | 
Alignment requirement(C11) | ||
| 3 |  * / %
 | 
Multiplication, division, and remainder | Left-to-right | 
| 4 |  + -
 | 
Addition and subtraction | |
| 5 |  << >>
 | 
Bitwise left shift and right shift | |
| 6 |  < <=
 | 
For relational operators < and ≤ respectively | |
 > >=
 | 
For relational operators > and ≥ respectively | ||
| 7 |  == !=
 | 
For relational = and ≠ respectively | |
| 8 |  &
 | 
Bitwise AND | |
| 9 |  ^
 | 
Bitwise XOR (exclusive or) | |
| 10 |  |
 | 
Bitwise OR (inclusive or) | |
| 11 |  &&
 | 
Logical AND | |
| 12 |  ||
 | 
Logical OR | |
| 13[note 1] |  ?:
 | 
Ternary conditional[note 2] | Right-to-Left | 
| 14 |  =
 | 
Simple assignment | |
 += -=
 | 
Assignment by sum and difference | ||
 *= /= %=
 | 
Assignment by product, quotient, and remainder | ||
 <<= >>=
 | 
Assignment by bitwise left shift and right shift | ||
 &= ^= |=
 | 
Assignment by bitwise AND, XOR, and OR | ||
| 15 |  ,
 | 
Comma | Left-to-right | 
- ↑ Fictional precedence level, see Notes below
 - ↑ The expression in the middle of the conditional operator (between 
?and:) is parsed as if parenthesized: its precedence relative to?:is ignored. 
When parsing an expression, an operator which is listed on some row will be bound tighter (as if by parentheses) to its arguments than any operator that is listed on a row further below it. For example, the expression *p++ is parsed as *(p++), and not as (*p)++.
Operators that are in the same cell (there may be several rows of operators listed in a cell) are evaluated with the same precedence, in the given direction. For example, the expression a=b=c is parsed as a=(b=c), and not as (a=b)=c because of right-to-left associativity.
Notes
Precedence and associativity are independent from order of evaluation.
The C language standard doesn't specify operator precedence. It specifies the language grammar, and the precedence table is derived from it to simplify understanding. There is a part of the grammar that cannot be represented by a precedence table: an assignment-expression is not allowed as the right hand operand of a conditional operator, so e = a < d ? a++ : a = d is an expression that cannot be parsed, and therefore relative precedence of conditional and assignment operators cannot be described easily.
However, many C compilers use non-standard expression grammar where ?: is designated higher precedence than =, which parses that expression as e = ( ((a < d) ? (a++) : a) = d ), which then fails to compile due to semantic constraints:  ?: is never lvalue and = requires a modifiable lvalue on the left. This is the table presented on this page.
Note that this is different in C++, where the conditional operator has the same precedence as assignment.
Associativity specification is redundant for unary operators and is only shown for completeness: unary prefix operators always associate right-to-left (sizeof ++*p is sizeof(++(*p))) and unary postfix operators always associate left-to-right (a[1][2]++ is ((a[1])[2])++). Note that the associativity is meaningful for member access operators, even though they are grouped with unary postfix operators: a.b++ is parsed (a.b)++ and not a.(b++).
References
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
 
- A.2.1 Expressions
 
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
 
- A.2.1 Expressions
 
- C89/C90 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990):
 
- A.1.2.1 Expressions
 
See Also
Order of evaluation of operator arguments at run time.
| Common operators | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| assignment |   increment decrement  | 
arithmetic | logical | comparison |   member access  | 
other | 
| 
 a = b  | 
 ++a  | 
 +a  | 
 !a  | 
 a == b  | 
 a[b]  | 
 a(...)  | 
|   C++ documentation for C++ operator precedence 
 |