Difference between revisions of "BitXor"
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== Example == | == Example == | ||
| − | <ms> | + | <ms>bitXor(14, 7) // returns 9</ms> |
[[Category:Intrinsic Functions]] | [[Category:Intrinsic Functions]] | ||
[[Category:Numeric Functions]] | [[Category:Numeric Functions]] | ||
Latest revision as of 14:46, 11 November 2023
bitXor treats its arguments as integers, and computes the bitwise `xor`: each bit in the result is set only if the corresponding
bit is set in exactly one (not zero 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 |
Example
bitXor(14, 7) // returns 9