Today I just made an interesting discovery while testing what happens calculating bitwisely in php like INF ^ 0
(^
=> Bitwise Operator for Exclusive OR (XOR)) what gave me int(-9223372036854775808)
=> greatest possible negative value in a 64-Bit system.
But then I was asking myself: "Why is the result going negative in XOR when the "positive infinit" means 9223372036854775807
(63 Bits on 1
with a leading 0
) and 0 (64 Bits on 0
=> 0 xor 0 = 0
) What is PHP's infinit value though and what is the calculation behind it? And why do I get a (correct?) negative value when I use "negative infinit"(A leading 1
against a leading 0
on 0 => 1 xor 0 = 1
?".
Another interesting point is that this just happens on PHP Version 5.5.9-1, and not e.g. on 5.3.x. and 5.6.x (where i've tested it)! Maybe someone has an idea what happens there? Tested it on three versions but just mine (5.5.9-1) gives those results:
Just to let you guys know, it's just an abstract playaround i've done for fun but I find it's interesting. Maybe someone can help here or explain me a wrong thought I have? Just tell me if someone needs more informations about anything!
EDIT: Accordingly to jbafford it would be great to get a complete answere, so i'll just quote him: why does 5.5 and 5.6 result in PHP_INT_MIN, and everything else return 0?
-9223372036854775808
is greatest possible negative value for a (64-bit) integer....INF
isn't an integer, but an IEE754 floatfloat(INF)
toint(0)
? Do you know how this works?Bitwise operators allow evaluation and manipulation of specific bits within an __integer__.
..... therefore it's a fallacious comparison. The bitwise ops don't typecheck whether you're executing them against a float, because they're interested at the bit level, but they will set the resulting data type to an integer1
if the float gets probably converted into an interger (it just seems like and i cannot find any example for comparing a float with an integer) or do I still missunderstand that?-9223372036854775808
as you're XORing all the bits.