153

I'm always surprised that even after using C# for all this time now, I still manage to find things I didn't know about...

I've tried searching the internet for this, but using the "~" in a search isn't working for me so well and I didn't find anything on MSDN either (not to say it isn't there)

I saw this snippet of code recently, what does the tilde(~) mean?

/// <summary>
/// Enumerates the ways a customer may purchase goods.
/// </summary>
[Flags]
public enum PurchaseMethod
{   
    All = ~0,
    None =  0,
    Cash =  1,
    Check =  2,
    CreditCard =  4
}

I was a little surprised to see it so I tried to compile it, and it worked... but I still don't know what it means/does. Any help??

1

10 Answers 10

140

~ is the unary one's complement operator -- it flips the bits of its operand.

~0 = 0xFFFFFFFF = -1

in two's complement arithmetic, ~x == -x-1

the ~ operator can be found in pretty much any language that borrowed syntax from C, including Objective-C/C++/C#/Java/Javascript.

7
  • That's cool. I didn't realise you could do that in an enum. Will definitely use in future Dec 22, 2008 at 23:31
  • So it's the equivalent of All = Int32.MaxValue? Or UInt32.MaxValue? Dec 23, 2008 at 18:52
  • 2
    All = (unsigned int)-1 == UInt32.MaxValue. Int32.MaxValue has no relevance.
    – Jimmy
    Dec 23, 2008 at 20:00
  • 4
    @Stevo3000: Int32.MinValue is 0xF0000000, which is not ~0 (it's actually ~Int32.MaxValue)
    – Jimmy
    Apr 25, 2009 at 0:38
  • 2
    @Jimmy: Int32.MinValue is 0x80000000. It has only a single bit set (not the four that F would give you).
    – ILMTitan
    Apr 26, 2013 at 21:14
60

I'd think that:

[Flags]
public enum PurchaseMethod
{
    None = 0,
    Cash = 1,
    Check = 2,
    CreditCard = 4,
    All = Cash | Check | CreditCard
 }

Would be a bit more clear.

7
  • 10
    It certainly is. The only good effect of the unary is that if someone adds to the enumeration, All automagically includes it. Still, the benefit doesn't outweigh the lack of clarity.
    – ctacke
    Dec 22, 2008 at 21:47
  • 13
    I don't see how that's more clear. It adds either redundancy or ambiguity: does "All" mean "exactly the set of these 3" or "everything in this enum"? If I add a new value, should I also add it to All? If I see somebody else hasn't added a new value to All, is that intentional? ~0 is explicit.
    – Ken
    Apr 2, 2009 at 18:46
  • 16
    Personal preference aside, if the meaning of ~0 was as clear to the OP as it is to you and I, he never would have posed this question in the first place. I'm not sure what that says about the clarity of one approach versus the other. Apr 2, 2009 at 19:36
  • 9
    Since some programmers that use C# might not yet know what << means, should we code around that, too, for more clarity? I think not. Sep 18, 2012 at 22:10
  • 4
    @Paul, that's kind of crazy. Let's stop using ; in English because many people don't understand its use. Or all those words they don't know. Wow, such a small set of operators, and we should dumb down our code for the people that don't know what bits are and how to manipulate them? Jan 4, 2014 at 4:39
23
public enum PurchaseMethod
{   
    All = ~0, // all bits of All are 1. the ~ operator just inverts bits
    None =  0,
    Cash =  1,
    Check =  2,
    CreditCard =  4
}

Because of two complement in C#, ~0 == -1, the number where all bits are 1 in the binary representation.

6
  • Looks like they are creating a bit flag for the payment method: 000 = None; 001 = Cash; 010 = Check; 100 = Credit Card; 111 = All
    – Dillie-O
    Dec 22, 2008 at 21:44
  • It's not two's complement, that's invert all the bits and add one, so that the two's complement of 0 is still 0. The ~0 simply inverts all the bits or one's complement.
    – Beardo
    Dec 22, 2008 at 22:45
  • No, two's complement is simply inverting all the bits. Dec 22, 2008 at 22:57
  • 2
    @configurator -- that's not correct. The ones complement is a simple inversion of bits. Dec 22, 2008 at 23:06
  • c# uses two complement to represent negative values. of course ~ is not two complement, but simply inverts all bits. i'm not sure where you got that from, Beardo Dec 22, 2008 at 23:49
17

Its better than the

All = Cash | Check | CreditCard

solution, because if you add another method later, say:

PayPal = 8 ,

you will be already done with the tilde-All, but have to change the all-line with the other. So its less error-prone later.

regards

1
  • It's better if you also say why it's less error-prone. Like: if you store the value in a database/binary file and then add another flag to the enumeration, it'd be included in the 'All' which means that 'All' will always mean all, and not just as long as the flags are the same :).
    – Aidiakapi
    Apr 19, 2012 at 15:41
11

Just a side note, when you use

All = Cash | Check | CreditCard

you have the added benefit that Cash | Check | CreditCard would evaluate to All and not to another value (-1) that is not equal to all while containing all values. For example, if you use three check boxes in the UI

[] Cash
[] Check
[] CreditCard

and sum their values, and the user selects them all, you would see All in the resulting enum.

4
  • That's why you use myEnum.HasFlag() instead :D
    – Pyritie
    Nov 7, 2012 at 14:36
  • @Pyritie: How does your comment have anything to do with what I said? Nov 7, 2012 at 18:51
  • as in... if you used ~0 for "All", you could do something like All.HasFlag(Cash | Check | CreditCard) and that would evaulate to true. Would be a workaround since == doesn't always work with ~0.
    – Pyritie
    Nov 15, 2012 at 12:13
  • Oh, I was talking about what you see in the debugger and with ToString - not about using == All. Nov 15, 2012 at 16:34
9

For others who found this question illuminating, I have a quick ~ example to share. The following snippet from the implementation of a paint method, as detailed in this Mono documentation, uses ~ to great effect:

PaintCells (clipBounds, 
    DataGridViewPaintParts.All & ~DataGridViewPaintParts.SelectionBackground);

Without the ~ operator, the code would probably look something like this:

PaintCells (clipBounds, DataGridViewPaintParts.Background 
    | DataGridViewPaintParts.Border
    | DataGridViewPaintParts.ContentBackground
    | DataGridViewPaintParts.ContentForeground
    | DataGridViewPaintParts.ErrorIcon
    | DataGridViewPaintParts.Focus);

... because the enumeration looks like this:

public enum DataGridViewPaintParts
{
    None = 0,
    Background = 1,
    Border = 2,
    ContentBackground = 4,
    ContentForeground = 8,
    ErrorIcon = 16,
    Focus = 32,
    SelectionBackground = 64,
    All = 127 // which is equal to Background | Border | ... | Focus
}

Notice this enum's similarity to Sean Bright's answer?

I think the most important take away for me is that ~ is the same operator in an enum as it is in a normal line of code.

0
5

It's a complement operator, Here is an article i often refer to for bitwise operators

http://www.blackwasp.co.uk/CSharpLogicalBitwiseOps.aspx

Also msdn uses it in their enums article which demonstrates it use better

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc138362.aspx

1

The alternative I personally use, which does the same thing than @Sean Bright's answer but looks better to me, is this one:

[Flags]
public enum PurchaseMethod
{
    None = 0,
    Cash = 1,
    Check = 2,
    CreditCard = 4,
    PayPal = 8,
    BitCoin = 16,
    All = Cash + Check + CreditCard + PayPal + BitCoin
}

Notice how the binary nature of those numbers, which are all powers of two, makes the following assertion true: (a + b + c) == (a | b | c). And IMHO, + looks better.

1

I have done some experimenting with the ~ and find it that it could have pitfalls. Consider this snippet for LINQPad which shows that the All enum value does not behave as expected when all values are ored together.

void Main()
{
    StatusFilterEnum x = StatusFilterEnum.Standard | StatusFilterEnum.Saved;
    bool isAll = (x & StatusFilterEnum.All) == StatusFilterEnum.All;
    //isAll is false but the naive user would expect true
    isAll.Dump();
}
[Flags]
public enum StatusFilterEnum {
      Standard =0,
      Saved =1,   
      All = ~0 
}
1
  • Standard shouldn't get the 0 value, but something greater than 0. Jul 20, 2016 at 8:10
1

Each bit in [Flags] enum means something enabled (1) or disabled (0).
~ operator is used to invert all the bits of the number. Example: 00001001b turns into 11110110b.
So ~0 is used to create the value where all bits are enabled, like 11111111b for 8-bit enum.

Just want to add that for this type of enums it may be more convenient to use bitwise left shift operator, like this:

[Flags]
enum SampleEnum
{
    None   = 0,      // 0000b
    First  = 1 << 0, // 0001b
    Second = 1 << 1, // 0010b
    Third  = 1 << 2, // 0100b
    Fourth = 1 << 3, // 1000b
    All    = ~0      // 1111b
}
0

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