1

As the title says, I'm a little lost on how to accomplish this in Ruby...there are number of topics on how to do this in C or C++. Any ruby experts out there that can chime in on this?

2
  • Are you just trying to store the value, or are you trying to represent the value as two 32-bit integers? That is, are you trying to take data and then split it in half, or do you want to also have support for adding two 64-bit values each represented with two 32-bit values, etc.? Jan 29, 2011 at 1:14
  • the later, the problem is that I have a 64 bit integer value that i need to pass to a service for tracking, they only accept 32 bit integer values, so i need to split the 64 bit value into 2 32 bit values that later i can restich together.
    – Sam
    Jan 29, 2011 at 1:31

2 Answers 2

4

The same syntax you'd use in C works in ruby, just drop the typecasts:

n = 0xFFFFFFFFEEEEEEEE
x = (n & 0xFFFFFFFF00000000) >> 32
y =  n & 0xFFFFFFFF
puts x.to_s(16)
# => "ffffffff"
puts y.to_s(16)
# => "eeeeeeee"
v = x << 32 | y
puts v.to_s(16)
# => "ffffffffeeeeeeee"

If you need the values to be in chunks of exactly 32 bits (i.e. you need to speak binary to some external data file or program), then you'll want to use Array#pack and String#unpack to get the right bits.

-1

one 64bit integer is not equal to two 32bit integers.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integer_(computer_science)

2
  • 1
    how is it done here then? stackoverflow.com/questions/2810280/…
    – Sam
    Jan 29, 2011 at 1:16
  • i just need to split the 64 bit integer, from what i understand its doable in C, by bit shifting
    – Sam
    Jan 29, 2011 at 1:17

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