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booleanlanguage-agnosticbitwise-operatorsboolean-logic

What are bitwise operators?


I'm someone who writes code just for fun and haven't really delved into it in either an academic or professional setting, so stuff like these bitwise operators really escapes me.

I was reading an article about JavaScript, which apparently supports bitwise operations. I keep seeing this operation mentioned in places, and I've tried reading about to figure out what exactly it is, but I just don't seem to get it at all. So what are they? Clear examples would be great! :D

Just a few more questions - what are some practical applications of bitwise operations? When might you use them?


Solution

  • Since nobody has broached the subject of why these are useful:

    I use bitwise operations a lot when working with flags. For example, if you want to pass a series of flags to an operation (say, File.Open(), with Read mode and Write mode both enabled), you could pass them as a single value. This is accomplished by assigning each possible flag it's own bit in a bitset (byte, short, int, or long). For example:

     Read: 00000001
    Write: 00000010
    

    So if you want to pass read AND write, you would pass (READ | WRITE) which then combines the two into

    00000011
    

    Which then can be decrypted on the other end like:

    if ((flag & Read) != 0) { //...
    

    which checks

    00000011 &
    00000001
    

    which returns

    00000001
    

    which is not 0, so the flag does specify READ.

    You can use XOR to toggle various bits. I've used this when using a flag to specify directional inputs (Up, Down, Left, Right). For example, if a sprite is moving horizontally, and I want it to turn around:

         Up: 00000001
       Down: 00000010
       Left: 00000100
      Right: 00001000
    Current: 00000100
    

    I simply XOR the current value with (LEFT | RIGHT) which will turn LEFT off and RIGHT on, in this case.

    Bit Shifting is useful in several cases.

    x << y
    

    is the same as

    x * 2y

    if you need to quickly multiply by a power of two, but watch out for shifting a 1-bit into the top bit - this makes the number negative unless it's unsigned. It's also useful when dealing with different sizes of data. For example, reading an integer from four bytes:

    int val = (A << 24) | (B << 16) | (C << 8) | D;
    

    Assuming that A is the most-significant byte and D the least. It would end up as:

    A = 01000000
    B = 00000101
    C = 00101011
    D = 11100011
    val = 01000000 00000101 00101011 11100011
    

    Colors are often stored this way (with the most significant byte either ignored or used as Alpha):

    A = 255 = 11111111
    R = 21 = 00010101
    G = 255 = 11111111
    B = 0 = 00000000
    Color = 11111111 00010101 11111111 00000000
    

    To find the values again, just shift the bits to the right until it's at the bottom, then mask off the remaining higher-order bits:

    Int Alpha = Color >> 24
    Int Red = Color >> 16 & 0xFF
    Int Green = Color >> 8 & 0xFF
    Int Blue = Color & 0xFF
    

    0xFF is the same as 11111111. So essentially, for Red, you would be doing this:

    Color >> 16 = (filled in 00000000 00000000)11111111 00010101  (removed 11111111 00000000)
    00000000 00000000 11111111 00010101 &
    00000000 00000000 00000000 11111111 =
    00000000 00000000 00000000 00010101 (The original value)