C# Tutorials and offshore development in India
    Tutorials   Resources   Forum   Reviews   Communities   Interview   Jobs   Projects   Training   Your Ad Here    
Silverlight Games | Mentor | Code Converter | Articles | Code Factory | Computer Jokes | Members | Peer Appraisal | IT Companies | Bookmarks | Polls | Revenue Sharing | Lobby | Gift Shop |


Prizes & Awards
My Profile



Active Members
TodayLast 7 Days more...






Resources » Code Snippets » C# Syntax »

The checked and unchecked operators in C#


Posted Date: 25 Apr 2008    Resource Type: Code Snippets    Category: C# Syntax
Author: VijayKumar Reddy MMember Level: Gold    
Rating: 1 out of 5Points: 7



The checked and unchecked operators are two new features in C# for C++ developers. These two operators force the CLR to handle stack overflow situations. The checked operators enforces overflow through an exception if an overflow occurs. The unchecked operator doesn’t throw an exception if an overflow occurs. Here the code throws an exception in the case of the checked operator, whereas the unchecked part of the same code won’t throw an exception:




checked
{
num1 += 5;
}
unchecked
{
num =+ 5;
}






Responses


No responses found. Be the first to respond and make money from revenue sharing program.

Feedbacks      
Popular Tags   What are tags ?   Search Tags  
Sign In to add tags.
(No tags found.)

Post Feedback


This is a strictly moderated forum. Only approved messages will appear in the site. Please use 'Spell Check' in Google toolbar before you submit.
You must Sign In to post a response.
Next Resource: The " typeof " Operator in C#
Previous Resource: Boxing example
Return to Discussion Resource Index
Post New Resource
Category: C# Syntax


Post resources and earn money!
 
More Resources



dotNet Slackers

About Us    Contact Us    Privacy Policy    Terms Of Use