Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

Why Does Or 0 Round Numbers In Javascript?

I'm under the impression that the Number type in Javascript stores any number, integer or float, according to the IEEE floating point standard. If so, then why does bitwise OR-ing

Solution 1:

In ECMAScript 5.1, all bitwise operations will convert the input to a 32-bit integer, and return a 32-bit integer. Regarding the operators ^, & and |, section 11.10 says:

The production A : A @ B, where @ is one of the bitwise operators in the productions above, is evaluated as follows:

1) Let lref be the result of evaluating A. 2) Let lval be GetValue(lref). 3) Let rref be the result of evaluating B. 4) Let rval be GetValue(rref). 5) Let lnum be ToInt32(lval). 6) Let rnum be ToInt32(rval). 7) Return the result of applying the bitwise operator @ to lnum and rnum. The result is a signed 32 bit integer.

Note that ToInt32 is applied on both sides before the operator is applied.

Solution 2:

Quote from MDN

Bitwise operators treat their operands as a sequence of 32 bits (zeros and ones), rather than as decimal, hexadecimal, or octal numbers.

If you didn't treat the numbers like this the bitwise ops wouldn't make much sense, which is why it is done

Solution 3:

At language level there is only floats, and temporary integers for bitwise operators.

Per spec, a float is turned into a 32-bit integer by doing the abstract operation:

var n = (sign(number) * floor(abs(number))) % pow(2, 32);
if( n >= pow( 2, 31 ) ) {
     return n - pow( 2, 32 );
}
else {
     return n;
}

I must emphasize that this operation is abstract and certainly not done in the above fashion by any engine so don't draw any performance considerations from it. (This goes for any other spec operation too)

Post a Comment for "Why Does Or 0 Round Numbers In Javascript?"