I\'ve been reading the classic Hacker\'s delight and I am having trouble understanding the difference between logical shift right,arithmetic shift right, and rotate right. P
Logical right shift means shifting the bits to the right and MSB(most significant bit) becomes 0.
Example: Logical right shift of number 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 is 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0.
Arithmetic right shift means shifting the bits to the right and MSB(most significant bit) is same as in the original number.
Example: Arithmetic right shift of number 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 is 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0.
The difference is pretty much explained in the right-most column.
>>
operator in C.Arithmetic shift treats the number as a signed integer (in 2s complement), and "retains" the topmost bit, shifting in zeros if the topmost bit was 0, and ones if it was one. C's right-shift operator has implementation-defined behavior if the number being shifted is negative.
For example, the binary number 11100101
(-27 in decimal, assuming 2s complement), when right-shifted 3 bits using logical shift, becomes 00011100
(decimal 28). This is clearly confusing. Using an arithmetic shift, the sign bit would be kept, and the result would become 11111100
(decimal -4, which is about right for -27 / 8).
Rotation does neither, since topmost bits are replaced by lowermost bits. C does not have an operator to do rotation.
First remember that machine words are of fixed size. Say 4, and that your input is:
+---+---+---+---+
| a | b | c | d |
+---+---+---+---+
Then pushing everything one position to the left gives:
+---+---+---+---+
| b | c | d | X |
+---+---+---+---+
Question what to put as X?
a
Now push everything one position to the right gives:
+---+---+---+---+
| X | a | b | c |
+---+---+---+---+
Question what to put as X?
a
d
Roughly.
Logical shift correspond to (left-shift) multiplication by 2, (right-shift) integer division by 2.
Arithmetic shift is something related to 2's-complement representation of signed numbers. In this representation, the sign is the leftmost bit, then arithmetic shift preserves the sign (this is called sign extension).
Rotate has no ordinary mathematical meaning, and is almost an obsolete operation even in computers.