I know the "<<
" is a bit operation. but I do not understand what it exactly functions in TCL, and when should we use it?
can anyone help me on this?
I know the "<<
" is a bit operation. but I do not understand what it exactly functions in TCL, and when should we use it?
can anyone help me on this?
The <<
operator in Tcl's expressions is an arithmetic bit shift left. It's exceptionally similar to the equivalent in C and many other languages, and would be used in all the same places (it's logically equivalent to a multiply by a suitable power of 2, but it's usually advisable to use a shift when thinking about bits and a multiply when thinking about numbers).
Note that one key difference with many other languages (from Tcl 8.5 onwards) is that it does not “drop bits off the front”; the language implementation automatically uses wider number representations as necessary so that information is never lost. Bits are dropped by using a separate binary mask operation (e.g., & ((1 << $numBits) - 1)
).
exec
command in a fashion similar to a bash here-document.
Jul 22, 2011 at 9:19
There are a number of uses for the << shift left operator. Some that come to my mind are :
I am sure there are many others.
<<
will not speed things up compared to /
I suppose. I mean, the OP should better not be deluded by that kind of purely imaginary speed boost.
The <<
operation is not much different from C's, for instance. And it's used when you need to shift bits of an integer value to the left. This can be occasionally useful when doing subtle number crunching like implemening a hash function or deserialising something from an input bytestream (but note that [binary scan]
covers almost all of what's needed for this sort of thing). For a more general info refer to this Wikipedia article or something like this, this is not really Tcl-related.
The '<<' is a left bit shift. You must apply it to an integer. This arithmetic operator will shift the bits to left. For example, if you want to shifted the number 1 twice to the left in the Tcl interpreter tclsh, type:
expr { 1 << 2 }
The command will return 4.
Pay special attention to the maximum integer the interpreter hold on your platform.