An operator is used to perform an operator on one or more values. The most common sorts of operators are
      arithmetic operators, such as those which perform addition or multiplication. For example:
      
process local integer x set x to 1 + 1
 The arithmetic operators available in OmniMark are + (addition), - (subtraction),
      * (multiplication), / (division), and modulo (the remainder you get when
      you divide the number by the base value).
    
 OmniMark also provides a full set of operators that are used to compare two or more numeric values. For example:
process do when x = y output "equal%n" else when x > y output "greater%n" else when x < y output "lesser%n" done
 The other available numeric comparison operators are != (not equal),
      >= (greater than or equal to), and <= (less than or equal to).
    
 Other common operators are &, |, and ! (the and, or,
      and not Boolean operators). These are usually used to create more complex conditions and tests in
      OmniMark. For example:
process do when x = y & z > 4 output "first test is true%n" else when y = z | x = 4 output "second test is true%n" else output "neither test is true%n" done
You can compare two record variables using the reference
        equality operator, ==.
    
You can overload OmniMark's arithmetic and comparison operators to work with new data types, particularly types
        that you define using records, by writing overloaded functions. When you overload a comparison operator, the
        return type must be switch.