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			2.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			62 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| ---
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| title: bitwise operator example
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| ---
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| # Bitwise operators
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| ## Truth table
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| 
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| 
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| The bitwise operators are similar to the logical operators, except that they work on a smaller scale -- binary representations of data. Any data can be converted to its binary equivalent. Though binary operators work at binary level but they are operated between normal decimal values only.
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| 
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| ## Types of Bitwise Operators
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| 
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| ### Bitwise OR
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| 
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| Bitwise OR is a binary operator (operates on two operands). It's denoted by |.
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| The | operator compares corresponding bits of two operands. If either of the bits is 1, it gives 1. If not, it gives 0.
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| 
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| ### Bitwise AND
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| 
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| Bitwise AND is a binary operator (operates on two operands). It's denoted by &.
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| The & operator compares corresponding bits of two operands. If both bits are 1, it gives 1. If either of the bits is not 1, it gives 0.
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| 
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| ### Bitwise Complement
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| 
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| Bitwise complement is an unary operator (works on only one operand). It is denoted by ~.
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| The ~ operator inverts the bit pattern. It makes every 0 to 1, and every 1 to 0.
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| 
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| ### Bitwise XOR
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| 
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| Bitwise XOR is a binary operator (operates on two operands). It's denoted by ^.
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| The ^ operator compares corresponding bits of two operands. If corresponding bits are different, it gives 1. If corresponding bits are same, it gives 0.
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| 
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| ### Left Shift
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| 
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| The left shift operator << shifts a bit pattern to the left by certain number of specified bits, and zero bits are shifted into the low-order positions.
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| 
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| ### Right Shift
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| 
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| The right shift operator >> shifts a bit pattern to the right by certain number of specified bits.If the number is a 2's complement signed number, the sign bit is shifted into the high-order positions.
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| 
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| ### Unsigned Right Shift
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| 
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| The unsigned right shift operator >>> shifts zero into the leftmost position.
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| 
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| ### Example bitwise operators :
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| ```java
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|     int a = 60;	      /* 60 = 0011 1100 represents 60 in binary*/
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|     int b = 13;	      /* 13 = 0000 1101 */
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|     int c = 0;
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|     
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|     c = a & b;        /* 12 = 0000 1100 */
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|     c = a | b;        /* 61 = 0011 1101 */
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|     c = a ^ b;        /* 49 = 0011 0001 */
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|     c = ~a;           /*-61 = 1100 0011  :Invert all bits */
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|     
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|     // shift operators : zeros are shifted in to replace the discarded bits
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|     c = a << 2;       /* 240 = 1111 0000 : Shift left 2 bits*/
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|     c = a >> 2;       /* 15 = 1111 */
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|     c = a >>> 2;      /* 15 = 0000 1111 : Zero fill right shift*/
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|       
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| ```
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| **FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:** <a href="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/nutsandbolts/op3.html">Click Here</a>
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