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Operator Statement

Declares the operator symbol, operands, and code that define an operator procedure on a class or structure.

[ <attrlist> ] Public [ Overloads ] Shared [ Shadows ] [ Widening | Narrowing ] 
Operator operatorsymbol ( operand1 [, operand2 ]) [ As [ <attrlist> ] type ]
    [ statements ]
    [ statements ]
    Return returnvalue
    [ statements ]
End Operator

Parts

  • attrlist
    Optional. See Attribute List.

  • Public
    Required. Indicates that this operator procedure has Public (Visual Basic) access.

  • Overloads
    Optional. See Overloads (Visual Basic).

  • Shared
    Required. Indicates that this operator procedure is a Shared (Visual Basic) procedure.

  • Shadows
    Optional. See Shadows (Visual Basic).

  • Widening
    Required for a conversion operator unless you specify Narrowing. Indicates that this operator procedure defines a Widening (Visual Basic) conversion. See "Widening and Narrowing Conversions" on this Help page.

  • Narrowing
    Required for a conversion operator unless you specify Widening. Indicates that this operator procedure defines a Narrowing (Visual Basic) conversion. See "Widening and Narrowing Conversions" on this Help page.

  • operatorsymbol
    Required. The symbol or identifier of the operator that this operator procedure defines.

  • operand1
    Required. The name and type of the single operand of a unary operator (including a conversion operator) or the left operand of a binary operator.

  • operand2
    Required for binary operators. The name and type of the right operand of a binary operator.

    operand1 and operand2 have the following syntax and parts:

    [ ByVal ] operandname [ As operandtype ]

    Part

    Description

    ByVal

    Optional, but the passing mechanism must be ByVal (Visual Basic).

    operandname

    Required. Name of the variable representing this operand. See Declared Element Names (Visual Basic).

    operandtype

    Optional unless Option Strict is On. Data type of this operand.

  • type
    Optional unless Option Strict is On. Data type of the value the operator procedure returns.

  • statements
    Optional. Block of statements that the operator procedure runs.

  • returnvalue
    Required. The value that the operator procedure returns to the calling code.

  • End Operator
    Required. Terminates the definition of this operator procedure.

Remarks

You can use Operator only in a class or structure. This means the declaration context for an operator cannot be a source file, namespace, module, interface, procedure, or block. For more information, see Declaration Contexts and Default Access Levels (Visual Basic).

All operators must be Public Shared. You cannot specify ByRef, Optional, or ParamArray for either operand.

You cannot use the operator symbol or identifier to hold a return value. You must use the Return statement, and it must specify a value. Any number of Return statements can appear anywhere in the procedure.

Defining an operator in this way is called operator overloading, whether or not you use the Overloads keyword. The following table lists the operators you can define.

Type

Operators

Unary

+, -, IsFalse, IsTrue, Not

Binary

+, -, *, /, \, &, ^, >>, <<, =, <>, >, >=, <, <=, And, Like, Mod, Or, Xor

Conversion (unary)

CType

Note that the = operator in the binary list is the comparison operator, not the assignment operator.

When you define CType, you must specify either Widening or Narrowing.

Matched Pairs

You must define certain operators as matched pairs. If you define either operator of such a pair, you must define the other as well. The matched pairs are the following:

  • = and <>

  • > and <

  • >= and <=

  • IsTrue and IsFalse

Data Type Restrictions

Every operator you define must involve the class or structure on which you define it. This means that the class or structure must appear as the data type of the following:

  • The operand of a unary operator.

  • At least one of the operands of a binary operator.

  • Either the operand or the return type of a conversion operator.

Certain operators have additional data type restrictions, as follows:

  • If you define the IsTrue and IsFalse operators, they must both return the Boolean type.

  • If you define the << and >> operators, they must both specify the Integer type for the operandtype of operand2.

The return type does not have to correspond to the type of either operand. For example, a comparison operator such as = or <> can return Boolean even if neither operand is Boolean.

Logical and Bitwise Operators

The And, Or, Not, and Xor operators can perform either logical or bitwise operations in Visual Basic. However, if you define one of these operators on a class or structure, you can define only its bitwise operation.

You cannot define the AndAlso operator directly with an Operator statement. However, you can use AndAlso if you have fulfilled the following conditions:

  • You have defined And on the same operand types you want to use for AndAlso.

  • Your definition of And returns the same type as the class or structure on which you have defined it.

  • You have defined the IsFalse operator on the class or structure on which you have defined And.

Similarly, you can use OrElse if you have defined Or on the same operands, with the return type of the class or structure, and you have defined IsTrue on the class or structure.

Widening and Narrowing Conversions

A widening conversion always succeeds at run time, while a narrowing conversion can fail at run time. For more information, see Widening and Narrowing Conversions (Visual Basic).

If you declare a conversion procedure to be Widening, your procedure code must not generate any failures. This means the following:

  • It must always return a valid value of type type.

  • It must handle all possible exceptions and other error conditions.

  • It must handle any error returns from any procedures it calls.

If there is any possibility that a conversion procedure might not succeed, or that it might cause an unhandled exception, you must declare it to be Narrowing.

Example

The following code example uses the Operator statement to define the outline of a structure that includes operator procedures for the And, Or, IsFalse, and IsTrue operators. And and Or each take two operands of type abc and return type abc. IsFalse and IsTrue each take a single operand of type abc and return Boolean. These definitions allow the calling code to use And, AndAlso, Or, and OrElse with operands of type abc.

Public Structure abc
    Dim d As Date 
    Public Shared Operator And(ByVal x As abc, ByVal y As abc) As abc
        Dim r As New abc
        ' Insert code to calculate And of x and y. 
        Return r
    End Operator 
    Public Shared Operator Or(ByVal x As abc, ByVal y As abc) As abc
        Dim r As New abc
        ' Insert code to calculate Or of x and y. 
        Return r
    End Operator 
    Public Shared Operator IsFalse(ByVal z As abc) As Boolean 
        Dim b As Boolean 
        ' Insert code to calculate IsFalse of z. 
        Return b
    End Operator 
    Public Shared Operator IsTrue(ByVal z As abc) As Boolean 
        Dim b As Boolean 
        ' Insert code to calculate IsTrue of z. 
        Return b
    End Operator 
End Structure

See Also

Tasks

How to: Define an Operator (Visual Basic)

How to: Define a Conversion Operator (Visual Basic)

How to: Call an Operator Procedure (Visual Basic)

How to: Use a Class that Defines Operators (Visual Basic)

Reference

IsFalse Operator (Visual Basic)

IsTrue Operator (Visual Basic)

Widening (Visual Basic)

Narrowing (Visual Basic)

Concepts

Widening and Narrowing Conversions (Visual Basic)

Operator Procedures (Visual Basic)