The basic value types provided in C# can be categorized as:
| Type | Example |
|---|---|
| Integral types | sbyte, byte, short, ushort, int, uint, long, ulong, and char |
| Floating point types | float and double |
| Decimal types | decimal |
| Boolean types | true or false values, as assigned |
| Nullable types | Nullable data types |
Defining Variables
Syntax for variable definition in C# is:<data_type> <variable_list>;Here, data_type must be a valid C# data type including char, int, float, double, or any user-defined data type, and variable_list may consist of one or more identifier names separated by commas.
Some valid variable definitions are shown here:
int i, j, k; char c, ch; float f, salary; double d;You can initialize a variable at the time of definition as:
int i = 100;
Initializing Variables
Variables are initialized (assigned a value) with an equal sign followed by a constant expression. The general form of initialization is:variable_name = value;Variables can be initialized in their declaration. The initializer consists of an equal sign followed by a constant expression as:
<data_type> <variable_name> = value;Some examples are:
int d = 3, f = 5; /* initializing d and f. */ byte z = 22; /* initializes z. */ double pi = 3.14159; /* declares an approximation of pi. */ char x = 'x'; /* the variable x has the value 'x'. */It is a good programming practice to initialize variables properly, otherwise sometimes program may produce unexpected result.
The following example uses various types of variables:
using System; namespace VariableDefinition { class Program { static void Main(string[] args) { short a; int b ; double c; /* actual initialization */ a = 10; b = 20; c = a + b; Console.WriteLine("a = {0}, b = {1}, c = {2}", a, b, c); Console.ReadLine(); } } }When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
a = 10, b = 20, c = 30
Accepting Values from User
The Console class in the System namespace provides a function ReadLine() for accepting input from the user and store it into a variable.For example,
int num; num = Convert.ToInt32(Console.ReadLine());The function Convert.ToInt32() converts the data entered by the user to int data type, because Console.ReadLine() accepts the data in string format.
Lvalue and Rvalue Expressions in C#:
There are two kinds of expressions in C#:- lvalue: An expression that is an lvalue may appear as either the left-hand or right-hand side of an assignment.
- rvalue: An expression that is an rvalue may appear on the right- but not left-hand side of an assignment.
int g = 20;But following is not a valid statement and would generate compile-time error:
10 = 20;
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