13

I need to check if a certain flag is set for an integer.

I already know how to set a flag:

flags := FLAG_A or FLAG_B or FLAG_C

But how can I check if a certain flag is set?

In C++ I used the & operator, but how does that work in Delphi? I'm a bit confused at the moment

3 Answers 3

31

In Delphi you have 2 options:

1) use 'and' operator, like this:

const
  FLAG_A = 1;  // 1 shl 0
  FLAG_B = 2;  // 1 shl 1
  FLAG_C = 4;  // 1 shl 2

var
  Flags: Integer;

[..]
  Flags:= FLAG_A or FLAG_C;
  if FLAG_A and Flags <> 0 then ..  // check FLAG_A is set in flags variable

2) define set type:

type
  TFlag = (FLAG_A, FLAG_B, FLAG_C);
  TFlags = set of TFlag;

var
  Flags: TFlags;

[..]
  Flags:= [FLAG_A, FLAG_C];
  if FLAG_A in Flags then ..  // check FLAG_A is set in flags variable
1
  • 4
    +1 for reminding me of a disaster that occurred when a smarty-pants developer caused big trouble by essentially testing for: ((FLAG_A and Flags) = 1) instead of ((FLAG_A and Flags) <> 0) It didn't work at all! And he snuck his "performance boost" change into one of the base classes, so we started having subtle data problems throughout the system. Sep 16, 2010 at 17:46
6

I usually use this function:

// Check if the bit at ABitIndex position is 1 (true) or 0 (false)
function IsBitSet(const AValueToCheck, ABitIndex: Integer): Boolean;
begin
  Result := AValueToCheck and (1 shl ABitIndex) <> 0;
end;

and the setters:

// set the bit at ABitIndex position to 1
function SetBit(const AValueToAlter, ABitIndex: Integer): Integer;
begin
  Result := AValueToAlter or (1 shl ABitIndex);
end;

// set the bit at ABitIndex position to 0
function ResetBit(const AValueToAlter, ABitIndex: Integer): Integer;
begin
  Result := AValueToAlter and (not (1 shl ABitIndex));
end;

Note there is no range checking, just for performance. But easy to add if u need to

2
  • the IsBitSet works for you ? i had to remove the 1 shl part in order for it to work for me, why did you shift left once ?
    – user1803300
    Apr 25, 2013 at 21:14
  • @user1803300 it does not work for you because your bit index is hex value not dicimal value Dec 14, 2017 at 14:37
5

You use the and operator as you would & in C++. On numeric arguments, it's bitwise. Here are some examples of bitwise operations.

4
  • But the result of that is again an integer, I require a boolean though :(
    – Mol
    Sep 16, 2010 at 15:12
  • 3
    @Mol: Use <> 0 or = FLAG_A to get a boolean, e.g. if (flags and FLAG_A) <> 0 then the flag is set. If the flag may have more than one bit, use if (flags and FLAG_A) = FLAG_A (because the <> 0 will only test if at least one of the flag's bits are set, not if all of them are). Sep 16, 2010 at 15:13
  • 4
    @Mol, the result is an integer in C++, too. C++ simply provides an automatic conversion from int to bool, whereas Delphi requires you to be explicit about what you mean. The usual way is to compare against zero, but you could also type-cast your result to LongBool. Sep 16, 2010 at 15:36
  • 2
    @Mol: If you want a boolean result, check out Serg's answer. Use a set and use "in" to test. Pascal doesn't do the "anything can be a boolean" thing; in fact, most of us see it as a design flaw of C's. In the Pascal family, a boolean is a boolean and a number is a number and they're not the same thing as each other, by design. Sep 16, 2010 at 16:56

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.