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I've read this post and in the part 2) Use Layers of Leosori's answer he use bit shift to get the bit mask. I wanted to have an explanation of how bit shift work (I didn't found my answer on the manual either).

In the example it is shown how to cast only on layer 8:

int layerMask = 1 << 8;
// This would cast rays only against colliders in layer 8.

So, how can I use bit shift to get the bit mask of layers 9 and 10 at the same time?

In my project I have some ray casts on my player to be able to know if he sees some specific objects (layer 10). If the objects are behind a wall (layer 9) the player shouldn't be able to see it. I would like to raycast on both layers and test if the hit.collider.gameObject.tag is "seekObjects". I know there are other solutions to do this but I would like to understand how bit shift works.

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Manipulating individual bits is mainly done using the &, |, ~ and <</>> operators.

Example (with bytes):

// single value
byte a = 1; // 00000001

// shift "a" 3 bits left
byte b = a << 3; // 00001000

// combine a and b with bitwise or (|)
byte c = a | b; // 00001001

So in your case, to get bit 9 and bit 10 set, do:

int layerMask = ( 1 << 9 ) | ( 1 << 10 );

Notice that we're using | and not ||, which is logical or.

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    tbh, answers here are far better than Unity's. They are putting their comments as answers.
    – nww04
    Apr 26, 2016 at 8:31

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