# computing permutation of specific bits in a number

As part of my master thesis, I get a number (e.g. 5 bits) with 2 significant bits (2nd and 4th). This means for example x1x0x, where $x \in {0,1}$ (x could be 0 or 1) and 1,0 are bits with fixed values.

My first task is to compute all the combinations of the above given number , 2^3 = 8. This is called S_1 group.

Then I need to compute 'S_2' group and this is all the combinations of the two numbers x0x0x and x1x1x(this means one mismatch in the significant bits), this should give us \$\bin{2}{1} * 2^3 = 2 * 2^3 = 16.

EDIT Each number, x1x1x and x0x0x, is different from the Original number, x1x0x, at one significant bit.

Last group, S_3, is of course two mismatches from the significant bits, this means, all the numbers which pass the form x0x1x, 8 possibilities.

The computation could be computed recursively or independently, that is not a problem.

I would be happy if someone could give a starting point for these computations, since what I have is not so efficient.

EDIT Maybe I chose my words wrongly, using significant bits. What I meant to say is that a specific places in a five bits number the bit are fixed. Those places I defined as specific bits.

EDIT I saw already 2 answers and it seems I should have been clearer. What I am more interested in, is finding the numbers x0x0x, x1x1x and x0x1x with respect that this is a simply example. In reality, the group S_1 (in this example x1x0x) would be built with at least 12 bit long numbers and could contain 11 significant bits. Then I would have 12 groups...

If something is still not clear please ask ;)

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I may not understand but if the second and fourth bits are significant, isn't the third bit significant as well? –  John Feb 22 '11 at 18:57
So do you want to obtain the number of permutations adhering to your constraints or a list of them? –  Argote Feb 22 '11 at 18:58
I don't actually understand the question. What is the actual end goal of all of this? –  Puppy Feb 22 '11 at 19:01
A number x0x0x will differ from a number x1x1x by 2 significant bits according to your definition, yet you say it means there is one mismatch in the significant bits. Which is wrong? –  recursive Feb 22 '11 at 19:04
@Argote, the 3 groups could be computed at the same time. The result at the end should be that 32 possible numbers (5 bits) would be placed in the correct groups. –  Eagle Feb 22 '11 at 19:06

#include <vector>
#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>

using namespace std;

int main()
{
string format = "x1x0x";

unsigned int sigBits = 0;
unsigned int sigMask = 0;
unsigned int numSigBits = 0;
for (unsigned int i = 0; i < format.length(); ++i)
{
sigBits <<= 1;
if (format[i] != 'x')
{
sigBits |= (format[i] - '0');
++numSigBits;
}
}

unsigned int numBits = format.length();
unsigned int maxNum = (1 << numBits);

vector<vector<unsigned int> > S;
for (unsigned int i = 0; i <= numSigBits; i++)
S.push_back(vector<unsigned int>());

for (unsigned int i = 0; i < maxNum; ++i)
{
unsigned int changedBits = (i & sigMask) ^ sigBits;

unsigned int distance = 0;
for (unsigned int j = 0; j < numBits; j++)
{
if (changedBits & 0x01)
++distance;
changedBits >>= 1;
}

S[distance].push_back(i);
}

for (unsigned int i = 0; i <= numSigBits; ++i)
{
cout << dec << "Set with distance " << i << endl;
vector<unsigned int>::iterator iter = S[i].begin();
while (iter != S[i].end())
{
cout << hex << showbase << *iter << endl;
++iter;
}

cout << endl;
}

return 0;
}


sigMask has a 1 where all your specific bits are. sigBits has a 1 wherever your specific bits are 1. changedBits has a 1 wherever the current value of i is different from sigBits. distance counts the number of bits that have changed. This is about as efficient as you can get without precomputing a lookup table for the distance calculation.

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i liked the idea, but sigBits and sigMask need to be as well computed... the question is how do i do that, when what i know is only x1x0x? –  Eagle Feb 22 '11 at 19:52
@Eagle, see my edit for a more general solution. –  Karl Bielefeldt Feb 22 '11 at 20:16

Of course, it doesn't actually matter what the fixed-bit values are, only that they're fixed. xyxyx, where y is fixed and x isn't, will always yield 8 potentials. The potential combinations of the two groups where y varies between them will always be a simple multiplication- that is, for each state that the first may be in, the second may be in each state.

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Use bit logic.

//x1x1x
if(01010 AND test_byte) == 01010) //--> implies that the position where 1s are are 1.


There's probably a number-theoretic solution, but, this is very simple.

This needs to be done with a fixed-bit integer type. Some dynamic languages (python for example), will extend bits out if they think it's a good idea.

This is not hard, but it is time consuming, and TDD would be particularly appropriate here.

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