Amita Shukla

blog by Amita Shukla

Bitwise Operators Cheat Sheet: Little Programming Tricks using Bit Operations

January 21, 2016 2 minutes read

PROGRAMMING

Here is the list that I use when dealing with bit-wise operations. Bit-wise operations are considered to be slightly faster than corresponding multiplication/division operations. Also, Bit-wise operations make the code cleaner at a few places, such as, when we have to check if a number is even or odd.

However, my personal opinion is to code in such a way that it easily showcases your intent. So, one should not use bit-wise operators deliberately as it can make the code a bit vague at some places.

  • Subtraction of 1 from a number toggles all the bits (from right to left) till the rightmost set bit(including the righmost set bit)
  • A >> 1 division by 2

A << 1 multiplication by 2

  • if ((x & 1) == 0) x is even, else odd
  • if (x & (1<<n)) n-th bit is set
  • y = x | (1<<n) set the nth bit x and save as y

y = x & ~(1<<n) unset(clear) the nth bit of x and save as y

  • y = x ^ (1<<n) toggle the nth bit of x and save as y
  • x & (x-1) will clear the lowest set bit of x or, turns off the rightmost set bit.
  • x & ~(x-1) extracts the lowest set bit of x (all others are clear). Pretty patterns when applied to a linear sequence.
  • x & (x + (1 << n)) x with the run of set bits (possibly length 0) starting at bit n cleared.
  • x & ~(x + (1 << n)) the run of set bits (possibly length 0) in x, starting at bit n.
  • x | (x + 1) x with the lowest cleared bit set
  • x | ~(x + 1) extracts the lowest cleared bit of x (all others are set)
  • x | (x - (1 << n)) x with the run of cleared bits (possibly length 0) starting at bit n set.
  • x | ~(x - (1 << n)) the lowest run of cleared bits (possibly length 0) in x, starting at bit n are the only clear bits.

Properties of Bit-wise Operations:

x^x =0

x^y^x = y

x^y = (~x & y) | (x & ~y)

Swap two numbers x and y

x = x ^ y ; y = x ^ y ; x = x ^ y ;