#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
if (~0 == 1)
printf("yes\n");
else
printf("no\n");
}
why is the if
statement false? can anyone explain?
~
Binary One's Complement Operator is unary and has the effect of 'flipping' bits.
So when you do ~0 == 1
it will check for -1 == 1
which is false
~
after this operator.
Mar 10, 2021 at 7:05
~0
would yield 0
(or to me more precise -0
) on a one complement machine and -INT_MAX
on a machine with signed magnitude representation.
~0 is equal to -1, not 1.
~
actually does.
printf("%d\n", ~0);
and see for yourself.~0
is not1
. Did you try to read about what~
actually does?!
and the~
operators. Tryif (!0 == 1) ...