首頁 > php教程 > php手册 > PHP教程之变量互换

PHP教程之变量互换

WBOY
發布: 2016-06-13 11:21:14
原創
1306 人瀏覽過

Attributed to Solomon W. Golomb; a method for swapping the values of two integer variables without using an intermediate variable (you can tell this dates from the Elder Days, when variables were expensive!). Thanks to PHP's syntax it's also a one-liner.
$a^=$b^=$a^=$b;
Okay, here's how it goes (yeah, like I need to make content-free posts just for the sake of an increment...).
First, simplify the line; noting that ^= is right-associative, which means that in that line the rightmost operator is evaluated first, that the assignment operators also return the value that they assign to their lvalue, and that foo^=bar is shorthand for foo=foo^bar:

Code:

<br>$a^=$b^=$a^=$b;<br>$a^=($b^=($a^=$b));<br>$a=$a^b;<br>$a^=($b^=$a);<br>$a=$a^$b;<br>$b=$b^$a;<br>$a=$a^$b;<br>
登入後複製

Recall what ^ does. Takes each pair of corresponding bits from its arguments (the internal binary representation of its arguments, that is), and xors them together to produce the corresponding bit of the result ("corresponding" means that the first bits of both arguments produce the first bit of the result, the second bits of both arguments produce the second bit of the result, and so on. This is why, as BuzzLY noted, it's important that both variables are the same size - demons probably start flying out of your nose if one of them runs out of bits to xor before the other. So to figure out what ^ does to a pair of variables, we only need to recap what it does to single bits



相關標籤:
來源:php.cn
本網站聲明
本文內容由網友自願投稿,版權歸原作者所有。本站不承擔相應的法律責任。如發現涉嫌抄襲或侵權的內容,請聯絡admin@php.cn
熱門推薦
熱門教學
更多>
最新下載
更多>
網站特效
網站源碼
網站素材
前端模板