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The Java™ Tutorials
Language Basics
Variables
Primitive Data Types
Arrays
Summary of Variables
Questions and Exercises
Operators
Assignment, Arithmetic, and Unary Operators
Equality, Relational, and Conditional Operators
Bitwise and Bit Shift Operators
Summary of Operators
Questions and Exercises
Expressions, Statements, and Blocks
Questions and Exercises
Control Flow Statements
The if-then and if-then-else Statements
The switch Statement
The while and do-while Statements
The for Statement
Branching Statements
Summary of Control Flow Statements
Questions and Exercises
Trail: Learning the Java Language
Lesson: Language Basics
Section: Operators
Home Page >Learning the Java Language >Language Basics
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The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases and might use technology no longer available.
SeeDev.java for updated tutorials taking advantage of the latest releases.
SeeJava Language Changes for a summary of updated language features in Java SE 9 and subsequent releases.
SeeJDK Release Notes for information about new features, enhancements, and removed or deprecated options for all JDK releases.

Bitwise and Bit Shift Operators

The Java programming language also provides operators that perform bitwise and bit shift operations on integral types. The operators discussed in this section are less commonly used. Therefore, their coverage is brief; the intent is to simply make you aware that these operators exist.

The unary bitwise complement operator "~" inverts a bit pattern; it can be applied to any of the integral types, making every "0" a "1" and every "1" a "0". For example, abyte contains 8 bits; applying this operator to a value whose bit pattern is "00000000" would change its pattern to "11111111".

The signed left shift operator "<<" shifts a bit pattern to the left, and the signed right shift operator ">>" shifts a bit pattern to the right. The bit pattern is given by the left-hand operand, and the number of positions to shift by the right-hand operand. The unsigned right shift operator ">>>" shifts a zero into the leftmost position, while the leftmost position after">>" depends on sign extension.

The bitwise& operator performs a bitwise AND operation.

The bitwise^ operator performs a bitwise exclusive OR operation.

The bitwise| operator performs a bitwise inclusive OR operation.

The following program,BitDemo, uses the bitwise AND operator to print the number "2" to standard output.

class BitDemo {    public static void main(String[] args) {        int bitmask = 0x000F;        int val = 0x2222;        // prints "2"        System.out.println(val & bitmask);    }}
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