How can I convert two 32 bit integers (int
) to one 64 bit long
and vice versa?
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In what way to you want to convert them? One possibility: (a << Integer.SIZE) | b– Nathan RyanMay 21, 2012 at 13:28
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Signed or unsigned? If unsigned, then what would negative values mean?– Aleks GMay 21, 2012 at 13:29
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Possible duplicate of Java storing two ints in a long– VadzimMay 28, 2017 at 7:56
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2 Answers
long c = (long)a << 32 | b & 0xFFFFFFFFL;
int aBack = (int)(c >> 32);
int bBack = (int)c;
In Java, you don't need quite so many parentheses, or any masking on the reverse calculation.
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1Lessee:
for (long i = Long.MIN_VALUE; i <= Long.MAX_VALUE; i++) {...
Jun 26, 2012 at 20:37 -
292 years is far far less than it will take. My computer also claims 292 years, as will everyone elses. For me
(stop - start)*2.0/reps*Long.MAX_VALUE)
is 1.207154932183553E22 while Long.MaxValue is 9223372036854775807 so when the cast to(long)
happens everyone ends up with 9223372036854775807. As thats 1/1308th the true value the time should actually be 382,000 years. (Still +1 though since the actual answer is correct) May 9, 2015 at 15:07 -
Haha, very nice Richard. I'm in the habit of never doing the millis-to-something-else conversion manually, but I also rarely try to get millisecond resolution on hundreds (or hundreds of thousands) of years. As I am no longer a teacher, I'll just edit out the whole "exercise" bit. The answer doesn't need to be so long.– FuwjaxMay 10, 2015 at 1:49
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Sorry if this is clear to everyone. Can someone explain this please. I understand the first part that we are vacating the last 32 bits. What is the second part doing. What will AND with all 1's give? I tried this with ((long)a << 32) + b and it gives the same out put and thats why I am wondering what the mask is in place for.– AshwinSep 8, 2015 at 18:45
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(long)a << 32 + b only works when b is positive. In Java, ints are signed, so you have to appropriately deal with the sign. We aren't ANDing with all 1's, the mask is a long (64 bits) with the lower 32 bits as 1's, this effectively treats b as an unsigned int when we are storing it in a long.– FuwjaxSep 9, 2015 at 19:27
Ints to longs:
long c = ((long)a << 32) | ((long)b & 0xFFFFFFFFL);
I'll leave it as an exercise for the reader to perform the reverse calculation. But the hint is; use more bit-shifts and bit-masks.
(Edited as per comment by T. Murdock)
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I think b is may well already be assumed to be valid, given the circumstances.– TharwenMay 21, 2012 at 13:31
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4This answer is subtly wrong: it will fail for
b = 0x1FFFFFFF
, on account of containing (as of this comment) seven Fs in the mask, not eight. That means it fails not only for all negative values of b (as the answer with no mask would fail), but also for large positive values of b. Nov 24, 2015 at 22:42