From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "c/iso646.h/bitand"
< c‎ | iso646.h

m (Inject moved page Iso646.h/bitand - C to c/iso646.h/bitand)
m
Line 1: Line 1:
{{DISPLAYTITLE: bitand macro - <iso646.h> - C}}
+
{{c title|bitand macro - <iso646.h>}}
 
{{Iso646.h - C}}
 
{{Iso646.h - C}}
The '''bitand''' macro, which is part of [[iso646.h - C|<iso646.h>]], is a convenient object-like macro name that expands to the '''&''' operator. The macro was added in [[Normative Addendum 1]] in an effort to provide support for international character sets that might not have the <code>&</code> symbols.
+
The '''bitand''' macro, which is part of {{C|iso646.h<iso646.h>}}, is a convenient object-like macro name that expands to the '''&''' operator. The macro was added in {{C|Normative Addendum 1}} in an effort to provide support for international character sets that might not have the <code>&</code> symbols.
  
 
== Synopsis ==
 
== Synopsis ==

Revision as of 12:39, 4 January 2015

The bitand macro, which is part of [[c/iso646.h<iso646.h>#|iso646.h<iso646.h>]], is a convenient object-like macro name that expands to the & operator. The macro was added in Normative Addendum 1 in an effort to provide support for international character sets that might not have the & symbols.

Synopsis

#include <iso646.h>
#define bitand &

Description

The bitand object-like macro expands to the & operator.

Example

#include <iso646.h>

int main ()
{
    if ((2 bitand 2) and (1 bitand 1))
        return 1;
    return 0;
}