The most challenging step in using C++ operator overloading (and in using C++ in general, actually) is probably moving from theory to practice: the theory in textbooks might be clear but its practical ...
Experimenting with the idea of an object-oriented pin class that uses operator overloading to intuitively abbreviate the usage of digitalRead(...), digitalWrite(...), analogRead(...) and analogWrite(.
Being able to use the same operator type to perform different operations. For example, arithmetic operators such as +, -, * and / could be defined to perform differently on certain kinds of data. See ...
Operator overloading or ad-hoc polymorphism lets you work with user defined types much the same way you work with fundamental data types Polymorphism is one of the basic principles of OOP (Object ...