I was bored enough to try doing it with a char array and using Convert.ToUInt32(string, int) to convert to a uint from base 2.
uint Range(int l, int h)
{
char[] buffer = new char[h];
for (int i = 0; i < buffer.Length; i++)
{
buffer[i] = i < h - l ? '1' : '0';
}
return Convert.ToUInt32(new string(buffer), 2);
}
A simple benchmark shows that my method is about 5% faster than Angrey Jim's (even if you replace second Pow with a bit shift.)
It is probably the easiest to convert to producing a uint array if the upper bound is too big to fit into a single int. It's a little cryptic but I believe it works.
uint[] Range(int l, int h)
{
char[] buffer = new char[h];
for (int i = 0; i < buffer.Length; i++)
{
buffer[i] = i < h - l ? '1' : '0';
}
int bitsInUInt = sizeof(uint) * 8;
int numNeededUInts = (int)Math.Ceiling((decimal)buffer.Length /
(decimal)bitsInUInt);
uint[] uints = new uint[numNeededUInts];
for (int j = uints.Length - 1, s = buffer.Length - 1 - bitsInUInt;
j >= 0 && s >= 0;
j--, s -= bitsInUInt)
{
uints[j] = Convert.ToUInt32(new string(buffer, s, bitsInUInt), 2);
}
int remainder = buffer.Length % bitsInUInt;
if (remainder > 0)
{
uints[0] = Convert.ToUInt32(new string(buffer, 0, remainder), 2);
}
return uints;
}
