Difference between revisions of "BitOr"
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ZachStrout (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<c>bitOr</c> treats its arguments as integers, and computes the bitwise `or`: each bit in the result is set if the corresponding bit is set in either (or both) of the argument...") |
ZachStrout (talk | contribs) |
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bit is set in either (or both) of the arguments. | bit is set in either (or both) of the arguments. | ||
− | See also: bitAnd bitXor | + | See also: [[bitAnd]] [[bitXor]] |
=== Arguments === | === Arguments === |
Revision as of 23:02, 15 March 2020
bitOr
treats its arguments as integers, and computes the bitwise `or`: each bit in the result is set if the corresponding
bit is set in either (or both) of the arguments.
Arguments
Parameter Name | Default Value | Meaning |
---|---|---|
i | number, default 0 | first integer argument |
j | number, default 0 | second integer argument |
Usage Notes
funcname
may be called either as a global method, passing the sequence or map as an argument; or as a member function (defined on list, string, and map) using dot syntax, with no arguments.
Example
bitOr(14, 7) // returns 15