show/hide this revision's text 2 fixed: UInt32.MAX_VALUE -> UInt32.MaxValue

Is there a reason not to use the System.Collections.BitArray class instead of a UInt32[]? Otherwise, I'd try something like this:

int minIndex = (int)x1/32;
int maxIndex = (int)x2/32;
// first handle the all zero regions and the all one region (if any)
for (int i = 0; i < minIndex; i++) {
    bitArray[i] = 0;
}
for (int i = minIndex + 1; i < maxIndex; i++) {
    bitArray[i] = UInt32.MAX_VALUEUInt32.MaxValue; // set to all 1s
}
for (int i = maxIndex + 1; i < MAX_DIV_32; i++) {
    bitArray[i] = 0;
}

// now handle the tricky parts
uint maxBits = (2u << ((int)x2 - 32 * maxIndex)) - 1; // set to 1s up to max
uint minBits = ~((1u << ((int)x1 - 32 * minIndex)) - 1); // set to 1s after min

if (minIndex == maxIndex) {
    bitArray[minIndex] = maxBits & minBits;
}
else {
    bitArray[minIndex] = minBits;
    bitArray[maxIndex] = maxBits;
}
show/hide this revision's text 1

Is there a reason not to use the System.Collections.BitArray class instead of a UInt32[]? Otherwise, I'd try something like this:

int minIndex = (int)x1/32;
int maxIndex = (int)x2/32;
// first handle the all zero regions and the all one region (if any)
for (int i = 0; i < minIndex; i++) {
    bitArray[i] = 0;
}
for (int i = minIndex + 1; i < maxIndex; i++) {
    bitArray[i] = UInt32.MAX_VALUE; // set to all 1s
}
for (int i = maxIndex + 1; i < MAX_DIV_32; i++) {
    bitArray[i] = 0;
}

// now handle the tricky parts
uint maxBits = (2u << ((int)x2 - 32 * maxIndex)) - 1; // set to 1s up to max
uint minBits = ~((1u << ((int)x1 - 32 * minIndex)) - 1); // set to 1s after min

if (minIndex == maxIndex) {
    bitArray[minIndex] = maxBits & minBits;
}
else {
    bitArray[minIndex] = minBits;
    bitArray[maxIndex] = maxBits;
}