Except as an exercise in building higher level operations from bitwise operations, the task you're trying to accomplish is foolish. Don't do it.
As an exercise, the most important thing to realize is that you don't have to go back to the start every time you need to implement something new in terms of the building blocks. Instead you could write addition and subtraction functions in terms of bitwise building blocks, and put those together using the existing higher-level algorithm you've already got.
As for eliminating the loop, you could just unroll it to support a fixed max number of digits (the longest value that will fit in int
, for example) unless you need to support arbitrary number of leading zeros. Recursion is a very bad approach in general and contrary to the whole "close to the metal" aspect of this exercise. Perhaps they just want you to avoid adding/incrementing a counter in the loop with "high level" addition, in which case you could use your bitwise adder function...
atoi
function, it's probably a good idea to use a different name, and explain what you want to achieve. I don't see you using bitwise operators anywhere in the code – which may or may not be your point, I didn't understand that part at all, especially since I'd expectatoi
to work without them, in the obvious implementation – and why do you expect to be able to do anything with an arbitrary-length string without a loop?