问题
What method would you use to determine if the the bit that represents 2^x is a 1 or 0 ?
回答1:
I'd use:
if ((value & (1L << x)) != 0)
{
// The bit was set
}
(You may be able to get away with fewer brackets, but I never remember the precedence of bitwise operations.)
回答2:
Another alternative:
if (BigInteger.valueOf(value).testBit(x)) {
// ...
}
回答3:
I wonder if:
if (((value >>> x) & 1) != 0) {
}
.. is better because it doesn't matter whether value is long or not, or if its worse because it's less obvious.
Tom Hawtin - tackline Jul 7 at 14:16
回答4:
You can also use
bool isSet = ((value>>x) & 1) != 0;
EDIT: the difference between "(value>>x) & 1" and "value & (1<<x)" relies on the behavior when x is greater than the size of the type of "value" (32 in your case).
In that particular case, with "(value>>x) & 1" you will have the sign of value, whereas you get a 0 with "value & (1<<x)" (it is sometimes useful to get the bit sign if x is too large).
If you prefer to have a 0 in that case, you can use the ">>>" operator, instead if ">>"
So, "((value>>>x) & 1) != 0" and "(value & (1<<x)) != 0" are completely equivalent
回答5:
For the nth LSB (least significant bit), the following should work:
boolean isSet = (value & (1 << n)) != 0;
回答6:
You might want to check out BitSet: http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/BitSet.html
回答7:
Bit shifting right by x and checking the lowest bit.
回答8:
In Java the following works fine:
if (value << ~x < 0) {
// xth bit set
} else {
// xth bit not set
}
value and x can be int or long (and don't need to be the same).
Word of caution for non-Java programmers: the preceding expression works in Java because in that language the bit shift operators apply only to the 5 (or 6, in case of long) lowest bits of the right hand side operand. This implicitly translates the expression to value << (~x & 31) (or value << (~x & 63) if value is long).
Javascript: it also works in javascript (like java, only the lowest 5 bits of shift count are applied). In javascript any number is 32-bit.
Particularly in C, negative shift count invokes undefined behavior, so this test won't necessarily work (though it may, depending on your particular combination of compiler/processor).
回答9:
The value of the 2^x bit is "variable & (1 << x)"
回答10:
declare a temp int and make it equal the original. then shift temp >> x times, so that the bit you want to check is at the last position. then do temp & 0xf to drop the preceding bits. Now left with last bit. Finally do if (y & 1 == 0), if last bit is a 1, that should equal 0, else will equal 1. Its either that or if (y+0x1 == 0)... not too sure. fool around and see
回答11:
If someone is not very comfortable with bitwise operators, then below code can be tried to programatically decide it. There are two ways.
1) Use java language functionality to get the binary format string and then check character at specific position
2) Keep dividing by 2 and decide the bit value at certain position.
public static void main(String[] args) {
Integer n =1000;
String binaryFormat = Integer.toString(n, 2);
int binaryFormatLength = binaryFormat.length();
System.out.println("binaryFormat="+binaryFormat);
for(int i = 1;i<10;i++){
System.out.println("isBitSet("+n+","+i+")"+isBitSet(n,i));
System.out.println((binaryFormatLength>=i && binaryFormat.charAt(binaryFormatLength-i)=='1'));
}
}
public static boolean isBitSet(int number, int position){
int currPos =1;
int temp = number;
while(number!=0 && currPos<= position){
if(temp%2 == 1 && currPos == position)
return true;
else{
temp = temp/2;
currPos ++;
}
}
return false;
}
Output
binaryFormat=1111101000
isBitSet(1000,1)false
false
isBitSet(1000,2)false
false
isBitSet(1000,3)false
false
isBitSet(1000,4)true
true
isBitSet(1000,5)false
false
isBitSet(1000,6)true
true
isBitSet(1000,7)true
true
isBitSet(1000,8)true
true
isBitSet(1000,9)true
true
回答12:
My contribution - ignore previous one
public class TestBits {
public static void main(String[] args) {
byte bit1 = 0b00000001;
byte bit2 = 0b00000010;
byte bit3 = 0b00000100;
byte bit4 = 0b00001000;
byte bit5 = 0b00010000;
byte bit6 = 0b00100000;
byte bit7 = 0b01000000;
byte myValue = 9; // any value
if (((myValue >>> 3) & bit1 ) != 0) { // shift 3 to test bit4
System.out.println(" ON ");
}
}
}
回答13:
I coded a little static class which is doing some of the bit operation stuff.
public final class Bitfield {
private Bitfield() {}
// ********************************************************************
// * TEST
// ********************************************************************
public static boolean testBit(final int pos, final int bitfield) {
return (bitfield & (1 << pos)) == (1 << pos);
}
public static boolean testNum(final int num, final int bitfield) {
return (bitfield & num) == num;
}
// ********************************************************************
// * SET
// ********************************************************************
public static int setBit(final int pos, final int bitfield) {
return bitfield | (1 << pos);
}
public static int addNum(final int number, final int bitfield) {
return bitfield | number;
}
// ********************************************************************
// * CLEAR
// ********************************************************************
public static int clearBit(final int pos, final int bitfield) {
return bitfield ^ (1 << pos);
}
public static int clearNum(final int num, final int bitfield) {
return bitfield ^ num;
}
}
If there are some questions flying around, just write me an email.
Good Programming!
回答14:
Eliminate the bitshifting and its intricacies and use a LUT for the right and operand.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1092411/java-checking-if-a-bit-is-0-or-1-in-a-long