show/hide this revision's text 2 Added clarification after Daemin's comment.

This article from Raymond Chen could be interesting:

When is x/2 different from x>>1? : http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/2005/05/27/422551.aspx

Quoting Raymond:

Of course, the compiler is free to recognize this and rewrite your multiplication or shift operation. In fact, it is very likely to do this, because x+x is more easily pairable than a multiplication or shift. Your shift or multiply-by-two is probably going to be rewritten as something closer to an add eax, eax instruction.

[...]

Even if you assume that the shift fills with the sign bit, The result of the shift and the divide are different if x is negative.

(-1) / 2 ≡ 0
(-1) >> 1 ≡ -1

[...]

The moral of the story is to write what you mean. If you want to divide by two, then write "/2", not ">>1".

We can only assume it is wise to tell the compiler what you want, not what you want him to do: The compiler is a better at optimizing than an human is at optimizing small scale code (thanks for Daemin to point this subtle point): If you really want optimization, use a profiler, and study your algorithms' efficiency.

show/hide this revision's text 1

This article from Raymond Chen could be interesting:

When is x/2 different from x>>1? : http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/2005/05/27/422551.aspx

Quoting Raymond:

Of course, the compiler is free to recognize this and rewrite your multiplication or shift operation. In fact, it is very likely to do this, because x+x is more easily pairable than a multiplication or shift. Your shift or multiply-by-two is probably going to be rewritten as something closer to an add eax, eax instruction.

[...]

Even if you assume that the shift fills with the sign bit, The result of the shift and the divide are different if x is negative.

(-1) / 2 ≡ 0
(-1) >> 1 ≡ -1

[...]

The moral of the story is to write what you mean. If you want to divide by two, then write "/2", not ">>1".

We can only assume it is wise to tell the compiler what you want, not what you want him to do: The compiler is a better at optimizing than an human is.