Why is this statement not working in java x ^= y ^= x ^= y;

后端 未结 2 525
死守一世寂寞
死守一世寂寞 2020-11-30 09:21
int x=1;
int y=2;
x ^= y ^= x ^= y;

I am expecting the values to be swapped.But it gives x=0 and y=1. when i tried in C language it gives the corre

相关标签:
2条回答
  • 2020-11-30 09:39

    Your statement is roughly equivalent to this expanded form:

    x = x ^ (y = y ^ (x = x ^ y));
    

    Unlike in C, in Java the left operand of a binary operator is guaranteed to be evaluated before the right operand. Evaluation occurs as follows:

    x = x ^ (y = y ^ (x = x ^ y))
    x = 1 ^ (y = 2 ^ (x = 1 ^ 2))
    x = 1 ^ (y = 2 ^ (x = 3))
    x = 1 ^ (y = 2 ^ 3)             // x is set to 3 
    x = 1 ^ (y = 1)
    x = 1 ^ 1                       // y is set to 1
    x = 0                           // x is set to 0
    

    You could reverse the order of the arguments to each xor expression so that the assignment is done before the variable is evaluated again:

    x = (y = (x = x ^ y) ^ y) ^ x
    x = (y = (x = 1 ^ 2) ^ y) ^ x
    x = (y = (x = 3) ^ y) ^ x 
    x = (y = 3 ^ y) ^ x             // x is set to 3
    x = (y = 3 ^ 2) ^ x
    x = (y = 1) ^ x
    x = 1 ^ x                       // y is set to 1
    x = 1 ^ 3
    x = 2                           // x is set to 2
    

    This is a more compact version that also works:

    x = (y ^= x ^= y) ^ x;
    

    But this is a truly horrible way to swap two variables. It's a much better idea to use a temporary variable.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-30 09:43

    Mark is completely correct about how it evaluates in Java. The reason is JLS §15.7.2., Evaluate Operands before Operation, and §15.7, which requires evaluation left to right:

    It is equivalent (by §15.26.2, Compound Assignment Operators) to:

    x = x ^ (y = y ^ (x = (x ^ y)));
    

    We evaluate left to right, doing both operands before the operation.

    x = 1 ^ (y = y ^ (x = (x ^ y))); // left of outer 
    x = 1 ^ (y = 2 ^ (x = (x ^ y))); // left of middle 
    x = 1 ^ (y = 2 ^ (x = (1 ^ y))); // left of inner
    x = 1 ^ (y = 2 ^ (x = (1 ^ 2))); // right of inner
    x = 1 ^ (y = 2 ^ (x = 3)); // inner xor (right inner assign)
    x = 1 ^ (y = 2 ^ 3); // inner assign (right middle xor)
    x = 1 ^ (y = 1); // middle xor (right middle assign)
    x = 1 ^ 1; // middle assign (right outer xor)
    x = 0; // outer xor (right outer assign)
    

    Note that it is undefined behavior in C, because you're modifying the same variable twice between sequence points.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题