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Reply to: C# and logical operators and uints
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Previously on "C# and logical operators and uints"
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The |, ^ and & operators work just fine with uints as per the msdn documentation on C# operators.
uint a = 100;
uint b = 1;
Console.WriteLine(a | b); // displays 101 as expected.
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+ works in this case but what if you wanted AND or XOR? C# is not a C-based language, but it does have C-like syntax so I also would have tried what you did. I suggest it's worth finding out for the future.
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You could use +
I'm sure I've done bitfields with C#, but I can't remember how. Or maybe you need to put it into "unsafe" mode.
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C# and logical operators and uints
I have an api call to createfile and want to pass the following
blah = CreateFile(DRIVER_NAME,GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE .....
the constants are declared as uints but at compile time I get
Operator '|' cannot be applied to operands of type 'uint'
fair enough, so what type should I use? Or is there a C# way of doing this.
C# is suppoooooooosed to be a c based language but I have run into difficulties.Tags: None
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