The second value is the number of spaces to shift, dint realize that.


Thanks for your time Chris.



Angelo



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Chris Boget" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <php-general@lists.php.net>
Sent: Monday, September 26, 2005 2:02 PM
Subject: Re: [PHP] Bitwise operators


> >I tested; I don't want to waste peoples time. Rewriting the question:
> > this outputs:
> > c = 32
> > d = 0
> > The question is why?
>
> First row is the bit's number and the second row is the bit's value:
>
> #8  | #7  | #6 | #5 | #4 | #3 | #2 | #1
> ---------------------------------------
> 128 | 64  | 32 | 16 |  8 |  4 |  2 |  1
>
> So your variable $a, which has a value of 4 starts out in the bit position
> of #3 with that bit turned on..  Shift it left 3 (value of $b) spaces and
> you
> end up with bit #6 getting turned on giving you a value of 32, which is
what
> $c is echoing out.
>
> Shifting to the right 3 spaces from the same starting position nets you 0
> with
> all the bits turned off.  At least, I'm pretty sure that's right.
>
> thnx,
> Chris
>
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