Bitwise operators
Bitwise operators modify the bits of the values involved. A bitwise OR
basically ORs together each bit of both the left and right argument. For example:
5 | 2
Would translate to bits/binary as:
101 | 10
Which would result in:
111
Because:
1 || 0 = 1
0 || 1 = 1
1 || 0 = 1
And as an Integer that is the representation of 7 which is exactly what you get if you:
echo 5 | 2;
In the words of Eddie Izzard... Flag!
As Ignacio states, this is most often used in PHP (and other langauges) as a way to combine multiple flags. Each flag is usually defined as a constant whose value is normally set to an integer that represents just one bit at a different offset:
define('FLAG_A', 1); /// 0001
define('FLAG_B', 2); /// 0010
define('FLAG_C', 4); /// 0100
define('FLAG_D', 8); /// 1000
Then when you OR
these together they operate each on their own bit offset and will never collide:
FLAG_A | FLAG_C
Translates to:
1 | 100
So you end up turning on:
101
Which represents the integer 5.
Then all the code has to do—the code that will be reacting to the different flags being set—is the following (using a bitwise AND
):
$combined_flags = FLAG_A | FLAG_C;
if ( $combined_flags & FLAG_A ) {
/// do something when FLAG_A is set
}
if ( $combined_flags & FLAG_B ) {
/// this wont be reached with the current value of $combined_flags
}
if ( $combined_flags & FLAG_C ) {
/// do something when FLAG_C is set
}
At the end of the day it just makes things easier to read by having named constants, and generally more optimal by relying on integer values rather than strings or arrays. Another benefit of using constants is that if they are ever mistyped when used, the compiler is in a better situation to tell and to throw a warning... if a string value is used it has no way of knowing that anything is wrong.
define('MY_FLAG_WITH_EASY_TYPO', 1);
my_function_that_expects_a_flag( MY_FLAG_WITH_EASY_TPYO );
/// if you have strict errors on the above will trigger an error
my_function_that_expects_a_flag( 'my_string_with_easy_tpyo' );
/// the above is just a string, the compiler knows nowt with
/// regard to it's correctness, so instead you'd have to
/// code your own checks.
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