I'm doing a java code porting to c++ and I have some logical instructions with shift:
((byte) ((buffer >>> 8) & 0xFF));
How can I write the same in C++?
byte, that doesn't exists natively in c++, I've defined as:
typedef unsigned char byte;
For unsigned integer types, >>
will fill with zero bits, just as Java's >>>
does.
Note: for signed types with a negative value, the result is implementation-defined, so it's probably best to avoid that case, and not rely on it filling with ones as the Java >>
would.
>>>
isn't a valid operator in C++, I'm curious how ((byte) ((258374 >>> 8) & 0xFF));
even compiles, much less gives you a result of 0xFFFFFFF1
.
Sep 30, 2014 at 9:59
byte
is defined as unsigned char
, and you're working on a typical machine with 8 bit chars, then there's no way that your expression can have a value of 0xfffffff1
; that value simply isn't representable in an unsigned char
.
Sep 30, 2014 at 10:12
byte
issigned char
. (At least on most typical machines, whereCHAR_BIT == 8
).