36

I need to mask certain string values read from a database by setting a specific bit in an int value for each possible database value. For example, if the database returns the string "value1" then the bit in position 0 will need to be set to 1, but if the database returns "value2" then the bit in position 1 will need to be set to 1 instead.

How can I ensure each bit of an int is set to 0 originally and then turn on just the specified bit?

8
  • 5
    intValue |= 1 << position;
    – user2819245
    Jun 16, 2014 at 19:16
  • Read up on bit wise operators too. Always good to know
    – Quintium
    Jun 16, 2014 at 19:17
  • 1
    @elgonzo, I like your solution better (since you don't need to figure out the hex number). I would upvote if it was an answer. Jun 16, 2014 at 19:18
  • possible duplicate of How to unset a specific bit in an integer Jun 16, 2014 at 19:19
  • @BradleyDotNET, don't push an old and very sloooow man ;-)
    – user2819245
    Jun 16, 2014 at 19:20

4 Answers 4

99

If you have an int value "intValue" and you want to set a specific bit at position "bitPosition", do something like:

intValue = intValue | (1 << bitPosition);

or shorter:

intValue |= 1 << bitPosition;


If you want to reset a bit (i.e, set it to zero), you can do this:

intValue &= ~(1 << bitPosition);

(The operator ~ reverses each bit in a value, thus ~(1 << bitPosition) will result in an int where every bit is 1 except the bit at the given bitPosition.)

0
11

To set everything to 0, AND the value with 0x00000000:

int startValue = initialValue & 0x00000000;
//Or much easier :)
int startValue = 0;

To then set the bit, you have to determine what number has just that bit set and OR it. For example, to set the last bit:

int finalValue = startValue | 0x00000001;

As @Magus points out, to unset a bit you do the exact opposite:

int finalValue = startValue & 0xFFFFFFFE;
//Or
int finalValue = startValue & ~(0x00000001);

The ~ operatior is bitwise not which flips every bit.

9
  • 1
    Might also mention that an & with all 1s and one 0 will set the specified bit to 0, in case that's needed.
    – Magus
    Jun 16, 2014 at 19:19
  • Hmm, complex way of setting it to 0, isn't it? Jun 16, 2014 at 19:22
  • @ThomasW. Indeed, changed the code to enhance the "just assign to 0" option. It does illustrate the later code better though (IMO). Jun 16, 2014 at 19:24
  • to reset a value, you can xor it with itself
    – axelduch
    Jun 26, 2014 at 14:20
  • 1
    @BradleyDotNET As long as your algorithm is optimized first, that makes sense to me. Without an optimized algorithm, bitwise operations are kind of useless.
    – axelduch
    Jun 26, 2014 at 17:07
4

so, this?

enum ConditionEnum 
{
    Aaa = 0,
    Bbb = 1,
    Ccc = 2,
}    

static void SetBit(ref int bitFlag, ConditionEnum condition, bool bitValue)
{
    int mask = 1 << (int)condition;
    if (bitValue)
        bitFlag |= mask;
    else
        bitFlag &= ~mask;
}
-2

Just provide a value, bit value and position. Note that you might be able to modify this to work for other types.

public static void SetBit(ref int value, bool bitval, int bitpos)
    {
        if (!bitval) value&=~(1<<bitpos); else value|=1<<bitpos;
    }

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