Bitwise operation and usage
One typical usage:
|
is used to set a certain bit to 1
&
is used to test or clear a certain bit
Set a bit (where n is the bit number, and 0 is the least significant bit):
unsigned char a |= (1 << n);
Clear a bit:
unsigned char b &= ~(1 << n);
Toggle a bit:
unsigned char c ^= (1 << n);
Test a bit:
unsigned char e = d & (1 << n);
Take the case of your list for example:
x | 2
is used to set bit 1 of x
to 1
x & 1
is used to test if bit 0 of x
is 1 or 0
what are bitwise operators actually used for? I'd appreciate some examples.
One of the most common uses of bitwise operations is for parsing hexadecimal colours.
For example, here's a Python function that accepts a String like #FF09BE
and returns a tuple of its Red, Green and Blue values.
def hexToRgb(value):
# Convert string to hexadecimal number (base 16)
num = (int(value.lstrip("#"), 16))
# Shift 16 bits to the right, and then binary AND to obtain 8 bits representing red
r = ((num >> 16) & 0xFF)
# Shift 8 bits to the right, and then binary AND to obtain 8 bits representing green
g = ((num >> 8) & 0xFF)
# Simply binary AND to obtain 8 bits representing blue
b = (num & 0xFF)
return (r, g, b)
I know that there are more efficient ways to acheive this, but I believe that this is a really concise example illustrating both shifts and bitwise boolean operations.
Bitwise operators are operators that work on multi-bit values, but conceptually one bit at a time.
AND
is 1 only if both of its inputs are 1, otherwise it's 0.OR
is 1 if one or both of its inputs are 1, otherwise it's 0.XOR
is 1 only if exactly one of its inputs are 1, otherwise it's 0.NOT
is 1 only if its input is 0, otherwise it's 0.
These can often be best shown as truth tables. Input possibilities are on the top and left, the resultant bit is one of the four (two in the case of NOT since it only has one input) values shown at the intersection of the inputs.
AND | 0 1 OR | 0 1 XOR | 0 1 NOT | 0 1
----+----- ---+---- ----+---- ----+----
0 | 0 0 0 | 0 1 0 | 0 1 | 1 0
1 | 0 1 1 | 1 1 1 | 1 0
One example is if you only want the lower 4 bits of an integer, you AND it with 15 (binary 1111) so:
201: 1100 1001
AND 15: 0000 1111
------------------
IS 9 0000 1001
The zero bits in 15 in that case effectively act as a filter, forcing the bits in the result to be zero as well.
In addition, >>
and <<
are often included as bitwise operators, and they "shift" a value respectively right and left by a certain number of bits, throwing away bits that roll of the end you're shifting towards, and feeding in zero bits at the other end.
So, for example:
1001 0101 >> 2 gives 0010 0101
1111 1111 << 4 gives 1111 0000
Note that the left shift in Python is unusual in that it's not using a fixed width where bits are discarded - while many languages use a fixed width based on the data type, Python simply expands the width to cater for extra bits. In order to get the discarding behaviour in Python, you can follow a left shift with a bitwise and
such as in an 8-bit value shifting left four bits:
bits8 = (bits8 << 4) & 255
With that in mind, another example of bitwise operators is if you have two 4-bit values that you want to pack into an 8-bit one, you can use all three of your operators (left-shift
, and
and or
):
packed_val = ((val1 & 15) << 4) | (val2 & 15)
- The
& 15
operation will make sure that both values only have the lower 4 bits. - The
<< 4
is a 4-bit shift left to moveval1
into the top 4 bits of an 8-bit value. - The
|
simply combines these two together.
If val1
is 7 and val2
is 4:
val1 val2
==== ====
& 15 (and) xxxx-0111 xxxx-0100 & 15
<< 4 (left) 0111-0000 |
| |
+-------+-------+
|
| (or) 0111-0100