I have an std::bitset
and the bitset type also provides a to_ulong
method to translate the bitset into a number, my problem is about translating the bitset into a number while just considering a range in that bitset, I need to implement my own powerof2 function or there is something with a more standard approach ?
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2 Answers
You can drop the unnecessary bits like
#include <bitset>
#include <iostream>
// drop bits outside the range [R, L) == [R, L - 1]
template<std::size_t R, std::size_t L, std::size_t N>
std::bitset<N> project_range(std::bitset<N> b)
{
static_assert(R <= L && L <= N, "invalid bitrange");
b >>= R; // drop R rightmost bits
b <<= (N - L + R); // drop L-1 leftmost bits
b >>= (N - L); // shift back into place
return b;
}
int main()
{
std::bitset<8> b2(42); // [0,0,1,0,1,0,1,0]
std::cout << project_range<0,8>(b2).to_ulong() << "\n"; // 42 == entire bitset
std::cout << project_range<2,5>(b2).to_ulong() << "\n"; // 8, only middle bit
}
Live example with output.
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@user2485710 I made some mistakes in the original version. This one is tested, see the live example. Commented Jul 25, 2013 at 12:25
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wait, doesn't work for me, in this case ideone.com/RNJXNH my program should print 15, it prints 120 because it doesn't drop the rightmost bits ... Commented Jul 25, 2013 at 12:46
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1@user2485710 bits [3, 7) as a subset of [0,32) represents 120, if you rightshift that another 3 bits, you get 15. If that is the behavior you want, simply change the last statement to:
b >>= (num - l + r);
Commented Jul 25, 2013 at 13:05
You can use string
as intermediate storage:
bitset<32> bs (string("1011"));
cout << bs.to_ullong() << endl;
// take a range - 2 last bits in this case
string s = bs.to_string().substr(bs.size() - 2);
bitset<32> bs1 (s);
cout << bs1.to_ullong() << endl;
Prints:
11 3
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nice to have options, but I think that this creates unnecessary temporary variables . I need to shrink my steps into a very small number. Commented Jul 25, 2013 at 12:24