In `yq` expressions are made up of operators and pipes. A context of nodes is passed through the expression and each operation takes the context as input and returns a new context as output. That output is piped in as input for the next operation in the expression. To begin with, the context is set to the first yaml document of the first yaml file (if processing in sequence using eval).
Both sides have now been evaluated, so now the operator copies across the value from the RHS (`.b`) to the the LHS (`.a`), and it returns the now updated context:
Just like math expressions - `yq` expressions have an order of precedence. The pipe `|` operator has a low order of precedence, so operators with higher precedence will get evaluated first.
Most of the time, this is intuitively what you'd want, for instance `.a = "cat" | .b = "dog"` is effectively: `(.a = "cat") | (.b = "dog")`.
However, this is not always the case, particularly if you have a complex LHS or RHS expression, for instance if you want to select particular nodes to update.
Because `|` has a low operator precedence, this will be evaluated (_incorrectly_) as : `(.[]) | (select(.name == "sally")) | (.fruit = "mango")`. What you'll see is only the updated segment returned:
There is another form of the `=` operator which we call the relative form. It's very similar to `=` but with one key difference when evaluating the RHS expression.
In the plain form, we pass in the 'root' level context to the RHS expression. In relative form, we pass in _each result of the LHS_ to the RHS expression. Let's go through an example.
Given a document like:
```yaml
a: 1
b: thing
```
with an expression:
```
.a |= . + 1
```
Similar to the `=` operator, `|=` takes two operands, the LHS and RHS.
Now it pipes _that LHS context_ into the RHS expression `. + 1` (whereas in the `=` plain form it piped the original document context into the RHS) to yield:
```
2
```
The assignment operator then copies across the value from the RHS to the value on the LHS, and it returns the now updated 'root' context: