Why does 1+++2 = 3?

Question:

How does Python evaluate the expression 1+++2?

How many ever + I put in between, it is printing 3 as the answer. Please can anyone explain this behavior

And for 1--2 it is printing 3 and for 1---2 it is printing -1

Asked By: udpsunil

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Answers:

Your expression is the same as:

1+(+(+2))

Any numeric expression can be preceded by - to make it negative, or + to do nothing (the option is present for symmetry). With negative signs:

1-(-(2)) = 1-(-2)
         = 1+2
         = 3

and

1-(-(-2)) = 1-(2)
          = -1

I see you clarified your question to say that you come from a C background. In Python, there are no increment operators like ++ and -- in C, which was probably the source of your confusion. To increment or decrement a variable i or j in Python use this style:

i += 1
j -= 1
Answered By: Greg Hewgill

1+(+(+2)) = 3

1 – (-2) = 3

1 – (-(-2)) = -1

Answered By: alexwood

The extra +’s are not incrementors (like ++a or a++ in c++). They are just showing that the number is positive.

There is no such ++ operator. There is a unary + operator and a unary – operator though. The unary + operator has no effect on its argument. The unary – operator negates its operator or mulitplies it by -1.

+1

-> 1

++1

-> 1

This is the same as +(+(1))

   1+++2

-> 3
Because it’s the same as 1 + (+(+(2))

Likewise you can do –1 to mean – (-1) which is +1.

  --1

-> 1

For completeness there is no * unary opeartor. So *1 is an error. But there is a **
operator which is power of, it takes 2 arguments.

 2**3

-> 8

Answered By: Brian R. Bondy

Think it as 1 + (+1*(+1*2))). The first + is operator and following plus signs are sign of second operand (= 2).

Just like 1—2 is same as 1 – -(-(2)) or 1- (-1*(-1*(2))

Answered By: Juha Syrjälä

I believe it’s being parsed as, the first + as a binary operation (add), and the rest as unary operations (make positive).

 1 + (+(+2))
Answered By: James Curran

Trying Unary Plus and Unary minus:

The unary – (minus) operator yields the negation of its numeric argument.

The unary + (plus) operator yields its numeric argument unchanged.

>>> +2
2
>>> ++2
2
>>> +++2
2
>>> -2
-2
>>> --2
2
>>> ---2
-2
>>> 1+(++2)
3
Answered By: gimel