bit-twiddle

Fast (native) bitwise operations for Ruby, in addition to the ones provided by the standard library


License
SAX-PD
Install
gem install bit-twiddle -v 0.1.2

Documentation

Fast bitwise operations for Ruby

Ruby has built-in implementations of the "workhorses" of bit manipulation: bitwise AND, OR, NOT, and XOR operations and bit shifts. This library adds more bitwise operations, which may be useful in implementing some algorithms. All the added operations are implemented in optimized C code (so this is MRI-only).

Install this goodness with:

gem install bit-twiddle

If you want all operations to be namespaced under the BitTwiddle module, load it with:

require "bit-twiddle"

Or for all operations to be defined as instance methods on Fixnum and Bignum:

require "bit-twiddle/core_ext"

In many cases, bit-twiddle operations explicitly work on the low 8, 16, 32, or 64 bits of an integer. (For example, it defines #bitreverse8, #bitreverse16, #bitreverse32, and #bitreverse64 methods.) If an integer's bit width is larger than the number of bits operated on, the higher-end bits are passed through unchanged.

Examples

Population count

"Popcount" or "population count" refers to the number of 1 bits in a binary number. For example, the popcount of decimal 11 (binary 1011) is 3.

Typically, Ruby programmers use goofy tricks like num.to_s(2).count("1") to compute this quantity. This is much faster, and doesn't needlessly allocate memory:

7.popcount   # => 3
255.popcount # => 255

Highest/lowest set bit

8.hi_bit   # => 4
255.hi_bit # => 8
8.lo_bit   # => 4
255.lo_bit # => 1

Rotating bits

0b10010011.rrot8(1).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "11001001"
0b10010011.rrot8(2).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "11100100"
0b10010011.rrot8(3).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "01110010"
0b10010011.rrot8(4).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "00111001"
0b10010011.rrot8(5).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "10011100"
0b10010011.rrot8(6).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "01001110"

0b10010011.lrot8(1).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "00100111"
0b10010011.lrot8(2).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "01001110"
0b10010011.lrot8(3).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "10011100"
0b10010011.lrot8(4).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "00111001"
0b10010011.lrot8(5).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "01110010"
0b10010011.lrot8(6).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "11100100"

8/16/32/64 bit variants are available.

Reversing bytes

0x11223344.bswap16.to_s(16) # => "11224433"
0x11223344.bswap32.to_s(16) # => "44332211"
0x11223344.bswap64.to_s(16) # => "4433221100000000"

Reversing bits

0b10010011.bitreverse8.to_s(2) # => "11001001"

8/16/32/64 bit variants are available.

"Arithmetic" right bitshift

An arithmetic right shift fills the vacated bit positions with copies of the most-significant (or "sign") bit. In contrast, Ruby's Integer#>> is a "logical" right shift -- it fills the vacated bit positions with zeroes.

0b10001111.arith_rshift8(3).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "11110001"
0b00001111.arith_rshift8(3).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "00000001"

8/16/32/64 bit variants are available.

Logical left and right bitshifts

Ruby already provides Integer#<< and #>>, which perform logical left and right bitshifts, so these are less useful than the other BitTwiddle methods. Probably the only reason to use them is if you want to explicitly operate on the low 8/16/32/64 bits:

0b10001111.rshift8(3).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "01000111"
0b10001111.lshift8(2).to_s(2).rjust(8,'0') # => "00111100"

8/16/32/64 bit variants are available.

Detailed documentation

Clone yourself up a copy of this repo, then generate some local HTML documentation (with examples for each and every method):

git clone https://github.com/alexdowad/bit-twiddle.git
cd bit-twiddle
bundle install
rake yard