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The Problem

  • I would like to change a bit combination to an other combination without affecting other bits.
  • In this combination some bits must be unset or set

Question: what is the best masking solution. Especially for the unset masking.I

An example: changing bits[3:0] -> 0b1011 (data) purpose bits[3:0] -> 0b0110

Let me share what I tried:

  • Created an unset mask: 1's complement of 0b1001 --> [1111]0110 (to change the don't cared bits to 1)
  • Created the mask: 0b0110

And with this two masks I could use the bitwise operations.

int data = 0xB;         /*0b1011 (0xb) -> 0110 (0x6)*/
int umask = 0x9;        /*unset mask 0b1001*/
int smask = 0x6;       /*Set Mask 0b0110*/

data &= ~umask;        /*Unset the bits what needs without affecting other*/
data |= smask;         /*Set the bits what needs to be set*/
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  • 1
    You're asking for a generic solution? Or to know if another (better) solution other than your proposed solution for those set values exists?
    – AntonH
    Dec 18, 2017 at 21:51
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    What you describe is exactly how it's typically done. Your compiler will do the rest. Dec 18, 2017 at 21:52
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    Very common pattern on microcontrollers (e.g. AVRs) when bit twiddling. A line like PORTB |= 1 << 2; will get turned into a single SBI set-bit assembly instruction.
    – Nick T
    Dec 18, 2017 at 21:56
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    Define best. The above works great as long as you aren't worrying about atomicity. If you are, there are some additional step to take, but your mask code stays mostly the same. Also, your compiler should be able to figure out if your system has a better assembly opcode to do what you want just from your code as well. Dec 18, 2017 at 21:57
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    If you need to change bits to both off and on, you need 2 masks. One to clear and one to set. Dec 18, 2017 at 22:21

1 Answer 1

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The simple answer is yes, you use 1 mask to clear the bits you want to clear, and another to set the ones you want set. But, occasionally, there are hidden hardware level things you need to be aware of, depending on how the masks and data are used and what they represent.

If you just want to set your 4 bits to a value:

val &= ~(0xf); // This only clears the low 4 bits, preserving the rest.

assert((new4BitMaskvalue & ~0xf) == 0); // Make sure new mask only plays with low 4 bits.
val |= new4BitMaskvalue;  // or new mask

You are technically clearing some extra bits, but this allows you to use just one generic mask on clearing. You can also clear the exact bits as you do, but this may not be necessary.

Often you can just assign the whole value and save a step if you are setting all fields at once in a memory unit size supported by your CPU. (u8/u16/u32/u64/etc.)

Now, the "fun" part. If these bits represent actual hardware registers, you may not be able to set entire fields like this as it can cause exciting behavior. Perhaps this is an interrupt enable register. If so, clearing and resetting bits that don't need clearing and setting will cause unintended side effects. Also, registers are often read or write only, where again you need to be careful on how you mask and may even be forced to set or clear individual bits one at a time.

In short, yes, you usually need at least 2 values to clear and set bits. The first not and mask can generally be allowed to clear all bits you care about so that you don't need 2 special masks.

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  • Yes, my main question is around register bit manipulation, but first I wanted to understand this problem, before I try that.
    – Peter
    Dec 18, 2017 at 22:49
  • You may already be saying this in fewer words but it is very important. It is a good idea if you are using pointer magic such that you have a pointer to a hardware register myreg that when you use it actually touches the register myreg &= ~0x7; myreg|=0x2; you would have changed those bits then changed them again, you want to make a copy temp=myreg; temp&=~0x7; temp|=0x2; myreg=temp. So understand the access method. If this is simply data in a variable then as stated and as you figured out you need an and to zero bits and an or to set bits.
    – old_timer
    Dec 19, 2017 at 10:00

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