+ is an example, one of many, of a binary operator in C or C++
a = b + c; // for usage example
comma (,) is an example
conditional operator , size of operator , membership operator and scope resulation operator can not be overload in c++
calloc operator,malloc operator
There is no "power" operator in C or C++. You need to the use the math library function pow().
There is no memory management operator in C++ -- it is an unmanaged language. You use the C++ new operator to allocate memory, and use the C++ delete operator to release previously allocated memory.
In C and in C++, the ++ operator means to increment. C++ was intended to be the next version, i.e. the incremental next step, of C, hence the use of the ++ operator.
The ++ in C++ refers to the postfix increment operator (operator++()). It's literal meaning is "the successor to C", in reference to the C language upon which the C++ language is based.
No.
delete
type operator- ();
The only "special" operators in C++ are those that cannot be overloaded. That is; the dot member operator (.), pointer to member operator (.*), ternary conditional operator (:?), scope resolution operator (::), sizeof() and typeof().
There is no unary plus in C, but if there were, it would have only one operand, unlike the binary plus which has two: x = a + b; /* binary plus */ x = + b; /* unary plus -- not in C*/ x = a - b; /* unary plus */ x = - b; /* unary minus */