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C Bitwise Operators

C Bitwise Operators

In this tutorial you will learn about all 6 bitwise operators in C programming with examples.


Bitwise Operators

Operators Meaning of operators Working
& Bitwise AND Give result 1 (true) if both bits are 1 (true)
| Bitwise OR Give result 1 (true) if any of the two bits is 1 (true)
^ Bitwise XOR Give result 1 (true) if the two bits are different
<< Left Shift Left shifts the bits of the first operand,
the second operand decides the number of places to shift
>> Right Shift Right shifts the bit of the first operand,
the second operand decides the number of places to shift
~ Bitwise NOT Invert all bits of operand

Bitwise AND operator &

The output of bitwise AND is 1 if the corresponding bits of two operands is 1. If either bit of an operand is 0, the result of corresponding bit is evaluated to 0.

Let us suppose the bitwise AND operation of two integers 12 and 25.

12 = 00001100 (In Binary)
25 = 00011001 (In Binary)

Bit Operation of 12 and 25
00001100
& 00011001
________
00001000  = 8 (In decimal)

Example #1: Bitwise AND

#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int a = 12, b = 25;
printf("Output = %d", a&b);
return 0;
}

Output

Output = 8

Bitwise OR operator |

The output of bitwise OR is 1 if at least one corresponding bit of two operands is 1. In C Programming, bitwise OR operator is denoted by |.

12 = 00001100 (In Binary)
25 = 00011001 (In Binary)

Bitwise OR Operation of 12 and 25
00001100
| 00011001
________
00011101  = 29 (In decimal)

Example #2: Bitwise OR

#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int a = 12, b = 25;
printf("Output = %d", a|b);
return 0;
}

Output

Output = 29

Bitwise XOR (exclusive OR) operator ^

The result of bitwise XOR operator is 1 if the corresponding bits of two operands are opposite. It is denoted by ^.

12 = 00001100 (In Binary)
25 = 00011001 (In Binary)

Bitwise XOR Operation of 12 and 25
00001100
^ 00011001
________
00010101  = 21 (In decimal)

Example #3: Bitwise XOR

#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int a = 12, b = 25;
printf("Output = %d", a^b);
return 0;
}

Output

Output = 21

Bitwise complement operator ~

Bitwise compliment operator is an unary operator (works on only one operand). It changes 1 to 0 and 0 to 1. It is denoted by ~.

35 = 00100011 (In Binary)

Bitwise complement Operation of 35
~ 00100011 
________
11011100  = 220 (In decimal)

Twist in bitwise complement operator in C Programming

The bitwise complement of 35 (~35) is -36 instead of 220, but why?

For any integer n, bitwise complement of n will be -(n+1). To understand this, you should have the knowledge of 2's complement.

2's Complement

Two's complement is an operation on binary numbers. The 2's complement of a number is equal to the complement of that number plus 1. For example:

 Decimal         Binary           2's complement 
0            00000000           -(11111111+1) = -00000000 = -0(decimal)
1            00000001           -(11111110+1) = -11111111 = -256(decimal)
12           00001100           -(11110011+1) = -11110100 = -244(decimal)
220          11011100           -(00100011+1) = -00100100 = -36(decimal)

Note: Overflow is ignored while computing 2's complement.

The bitwise complement of 35 is 220 (in decimal). The 2's complement of 220 is -36. Hence, the output is -36 instead of 220.

Bitwise complement of any number N is -(N+1). Here's how:

bitwise complement of N = ~N (represented in 2's complement form)
2'complement of ~N= -(~(~N)+1) = -(N+1)

Example #4: Bitwise complement

#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
printf("Output = %d\n",~35);
printf("Output = %d\n",~-12);
return 0;
}

Output

Output = -36
Output = 11

Shift Operators in C programming

There are two shift operators in C programming:

  • Right shift operator
  • Left shift operator.

Right Shift Operator

Right shift operator shifts all bits towards right by certain number of specified bits. It is denoted by >>.

212 = 11010100 (In binary)
212>>2 = 00110101 (In binary) [Right shift by two bits]
212>>7 = 00000001 (In binary)
212>>8 = 00000000 
212>>0 = 11010100 (No Shift)

Left Shift Operator

Left shift operator shifts all bits towards left by a certain number of specified bits. The bit positions that have been vacated by the left shift operator are filled with 0. The symbol of the left shift operator is <<.

212 = 11010100 (In binary)
212<<1 = 110101000 (In binary) [Left shift by one bit]
212<<0 = 11010100 (Shift by 0)
212<<4 = 110101000000 (In binary) =3392(In decimal)

Example #5: Shift Operators

#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int num=212, i;
for (i=0; i<=2; ++i)
printf("Right shift by %d: %d\n", i, num>>i);

printf("\n");

for (i=0; i<=2; ++i) 
printf("Left shift by %d: %d\n", i, num<<i);    

return 0;
}

Right Shift by 0: 212
Right Shift by 1: 106
Right Shift by 2: 53

Left Shift by 0: 212
Left Shift by 1: 424
Left Shift by 2: 848

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