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_ull
—
count 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
stdc_trailing_ones
()
family of functions counts the number of consecutive one bits present in
value starting at the least significant bit.
The
stdc_trailing_ones
()
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.
Example 1 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 |