STDC_TRAILING_ONES(3C) Standard C Library Functions STDC_TRAILING_ONES(3C)

stdc_trailing_ones, stdc_trailing_ones_uc, stdc_trailing_ones_us, stdc_trailing_ones_ui, stdc_trailing_ones_ul, stdc_trailing_ones_ullcount consecutive trailing one bits

Standard C Library (libc, -lc)

#include <stdbit.h>

unsigned int
stdc_trailing_ones(generic_value_type value);

unsigned int
stdc_trailing_ones_uc(unsigned char value);

unsigned int
stdc_trailing_ones_us(unsigned short value);

unsigned int
stdc_trailing_ones_ui(unsigned int value);

unsigned int
stdc_trailing_ones_ul(unsigned long value);

unsigned int
stdc_trailing_ones_ull(unsigned long long value);

The () family of functions counts the number of consecutive one bits present in value starting at the least significant bit.

The () function is generic and will operate on all 8, 16, 32, and 64-bit unsigned integers; however, it is only available in C23. The other functions all operate on a specific integer type, but otherwise behave the same and are available regardless of the C language version.

The functions in the stdc_trailing_ones() family always return the number of trailing ones found in value. These functions cannot fail.

Printing the number of trailing ones.

#include <stdbit.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <limits.h>

int
main(void)
{
	printf("0x%x 0x%x 0x%x 0x%x\n", stdc_trailing_ones_uc(0x23),
	    stdc_trailing_ones_us(0x9fff), stdc_trailing_ones_ui(UINT32_MAX),
	    stdc_trailing_ones_ull(0));
	return (0);
}

When compiled and run, this produces:

$ ./a.out
0x2 0xd 0x20 0x0

stdc_bit_ceil(3C), stdc_bit_floor(3C), stdc_bit_width(3C), stdc_count_ones(3C), stdc_count_ones(3C), stdc_first_leading_one(3C), stdc_first_leading_zero(3C), stdc_first_trailing_one(3C), stdc_first_trailing_zero(3C), stdc_has_single_bit(3C), stdc_leading_ones(3C), stdc_leading_ones(3C), stdc_trailing_zeros(3C), stdbit.h(3HEAD)

October 27, 2024 OmniOS