Try this. Calculate the range of array items that must be filled with all ones and do this by iterating over this range. Finally set the items at both borders.
Int32 startIndex = x1 >> 5;
Int32 endIndex = x2 >> 5;
bitArray[startIndex] = UInt32.MaxValue << (x1 % 32)& 31);
for (Int32 i = startIndex + 1; i <= endIndex; i++)
{
bitArray[i] = UInt32.MaxValue;
}
bitArray[endIndex] &= UInt32.MaxValue >> (31 - (x2 % 32))& 31));
May be the code is not 100% correct, but the idea should work.
Just tested it and found three bugs. The calculation at start index required a mod 32 and at end index the 32 must be 31 and a logical and instead of a assignment to handle the case of start and end index being the same. Should be quite fast.
Just benchmarked it with equal distribution of x1 and x2 over the array. Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 3.0 GHz, MS VirtualPC with Server 2003 R2 on Windows XP host.
Array length [bits] 320 160 64
Performance [executions/s] 33 million 43 million 54 million
One more optimazation x % 32 == x & 31 but I am unable to meassure a performance gain. Because of only 10.000.000 iterations in my test the fluctuations are quite high. And I am running in VirtualPC making the situation even more unpredictable.
