Compartir a través de


* Operator (C# Reference) 

The multiplication operator (*), which computes the product of its operands. Also, the dereference operator, which allows reading and writing to a pointer.

Remarks

All numeric types have predefined multiplication operators.

The * operator is also used to declare pointer types and to dereference pointers. This operator can only be used in unsafe contexts, denoted by the use of the unsafe keyword, and requiring the /unsafe compiler option. The dereference operator is also known as the indirection operator.

User-defined types can overload the binary * operator (see operator). When a binary operator is overloaded, the corresponding assignment operator, if any, is also implicitly overloaded.

Example

// cs_operator_mult.cs
using System;
class MainClass
{
    static void Main() 
    {
        Console.WriteLine(5 * 2);
        Console.WriteLine(-.5 * .2);
        Console.WriteLine(-.5m * .2m); // decimal type
    }
}

Output

10
-0.1
-0.10
// cs_operator_ptr.cs
// compile with: /unsafe
public class MainClass
{
    unsafe static void Main()
    {
        int i = 5;
        int* j = &i;
        System.Console.WriteLine(*j);
    }
}

Output

5

See Also

Reference

C# Operators

Concepts

C# Programming Guide
Unsafe Code and Pointers (C# Programming Guide)

Other Resources

C# Reference