ECMA-334 C# Language Specification

14.12: Conditional operator

The ?: operator is called the conditional operator. It is at times also called the ternary operator.

conditional-expression
conditional-or-expression
conditional-or-expression ? expression : expression

A conditional expression of the form b ? x : y first evaluates the condition b. Then, if b is true, x is evaluated and becomes the result of the operation. Otherwise, y is evaluated and becomes the result of the operation. A conditional expression never evaluates both x and y.

The conditional operator is right-associative, meaning that operations are grouped from right to left. For example, an expression of the form a ? b : c ? d : e is evaluated as a ? b : (c ? d : e).

The first operand of the ?: operator must be an expression of a type that can be implicitly converted to bool , or an expression of a type that implements operator true. If neither of these requirements is satisfied, a compile-time error occurs.

The second and third operands of the ?: operator control the type of the conditional expression. Let X and Y be the types of the second and third operands. Then,

The run-time processing of a conditional expression of the form b ? x : y consists of the following steps: