Click here to Skip to main content
15,894,825 members
Articles / Programming Languages / C++/CLI
Article

The Stupid XOR Trick

Rate me:
Please Sign up or sign in to vote.
3.58/5 (28 votes)
13 Aug 2002CPOL2 min read 249.2K   39   130
Explaining the phenomenon of x^=y^=x^=y;

Introduction

As a result of many, sometimes insulting, reactions on my signature, I decided to write an article on this topic. The mentioned signature looks like this:

int x=1, y=5; 
x^=y^=x^=y; // what's the content of x and y now?

Well, the reactions range from "that's not even valid C/C++ code" to "that works only with X=1 and y=5" and "you better learn C". To all these unbelievers and of course everyone else who doesn't know this "trick"; may this article enlighten you :)

What it's meant to do

Simply exchange the values of two integer variables without using a temporary variable. It gives unpredictable results with other variable types than integer types.

The symbol ^ is the XOR operator used in C/C++. See the article from PJ Arends on Bitwise Operators for a full introduction to bits and related operators.

The questionable code fragment x^=y^=x^=y; can be expanded into x XOR y XOR x XOR y. Since C/C++ resolves expressions like this from right to left, we can split it into the steps performed by the compiler:

x ^= y; // the right-most expression
y ^= x; // the middle expression
x ^= y; // the left-most expression

Which can be further expanded into

x = x ^ y; // x = 1 XOR 5  -> x = 4
y = y ^ x; // y = 5 XOR 4 = 1  -> y = 1
x = x ^ y; // x = 4 XOR 1 = 5  -> x = 5

Voila, here we are x=5 and y=1. That's what we wanted to achieve. And all this without using a temporary variable like in int t = x; x = y; y = t; which most programmers use. I confess that my method is confusing to most people because it's a little known method. As an additional benefit, the compiler can translate it into 3 simple XOR assembler statements.

Sample

For all who still don't believe it, here is a sample program to prove  that it works (with any integer number). The sample can be compiled in Ansi and Unicode and is compatible with VC6 and VC7. It is not using any library except the standard C Runtime Library.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <tchar.h>

int _tmain(int argc, TCHAR* argv[])
{
    if(argc != 3)
    {
        _tprintf(
            _T("\nUsage: StupidXORTricks.exe intvalue1 intvalue2\n"));
    }
    else
    {
        int x = _ttoi(argv[1]);
        int y = _ttoi(argv[2]);

        _tprintf(_T("x = %d, y = %d\n"), x, y);
        _tprintf(_T("Performing x^=y^=x^=y...\n"));
		
        x^=y^=x^=y;

        _tprintf(_T("x = %d, y = %d\n"), x, y);

    }
    return 0;
}

Finally, I hope that I don't get any more responses to my sig. :)

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)


Written By
Software Developer (Senior)
Portugal Portugal
Software Smith, Blacksmith, Repeat Founder, Austrian, Asgardian.

Comments and Discussions

 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Jim Hawkins19-Aug-02 23:54
Jim Hawkins19-Aug-02 23:54 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
sykix20-Apr-03 10:07
sykix20-Apr-03 10:07 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
KevinHall22-Apr-03 11:37
KevinHall22-Apr-03 11:37 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Phil Harding19-Aug-02 23:56
Phil Harding19-Aug-02 23:56 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Anonymous21-Aug-02 11:09
Anonymous21-Aug-02 11:09 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Philippe Mori28-Aug-02 3:16
Philippe Mori28-Aug-02 3:16 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
xr1st0s24-Jan-03 2:00
xr1st0s24-Jan-03 2:00 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
axiac21-Aug-02 2:00
axiac21-Aug-02 2:00 
melwyn wrote:
Given the following lines of code:
int i, n = 20;
for (i = 0; i < n; i--)
printf ("-");

now u all know this will result in infinite loop. Show 3 ways in which , by changing 1 and only 1 character, it will print the character "-" 20 times.


Hmmm... it is not an infinite loop. It loops 2N-1 times where N is the number of bits used to store the variables (32 on the most commonly used processors and OS-es nowadays). When i == -2N-1, i-1 is 2N-1-1 which is, of course, greater than 20 (the value of n). This happens because of the representation of the integer numbers in computer.

A solution to the puzzle is to change i < n to i + n.

--
axiac
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
FilthyZombie21-Aug-02 4:50
FilthyZombie21-Aug-02 4:50 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Anonymous23-Aug-02 9:26
Anonymous23-Aug-02 9:26 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Anonymous23-Aug-02 9:31
Anonymous23-Aug-02 9:31 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Alex Panov24-Aug-02 22:00
Alex Panov24-Aug-02 22:00 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Philippe Mori28-Aug-02 3:19
Philippe Mori28-Aug-02 3:19 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
rolst522-Nov-02 3:08
rolst522-Nov-02 3:08 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! (one answer) Pin
Alton Williams19-Oct-03 2:18
Alton Williams19-Oct-03 2:18 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Zyxil26-Aug-02 2:36
Zyxil26-Aug-02 2:36 
GeneralRe: It's an interview question! Pin
Tim Lesher26-Aug-02 5:34
Tim Lesher26-Aug-02 5:34 
QuestionEh? Pin
-Dy15-Aug-02 0:16
-Dy15-Aug-02 0:16 
AnswerRe: Eh? Pin
S van Leent15-Aug-02 3:11
S van Leent15-Aug-02 3:11 
GeneralOMG I can't belive I read this article Pin
lex_cdn14-Aug-02 22:00
lex_cdn14-Aug-02 22:00 
GeneralRe: OMG I can't belive I read this article Pin
Andreas Saurwein16-Aug-02 6:36
Andreas Saurwein16-Aug-02 6:36 
Generalold trick Pin
Peter Marino14-Aug-02 20:04
Peter Marino14-Aug-02 20:04 
GeneralPlain evil Pin
Robin14-Aug-02 18:23
Robin14-Aug-02 18:23 
QuestionWas it me ? Pin
ColinDavies14-Aug-02 17:58
ColinDavies14-Aug-02 17:58 
AnswerRe: Was it me ? Pin
Andreas Saurwein16-Aug-02 6:32
Andreas Saurwein16-Aug-02 6:32 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.