I came across a line of code using Python’s numpy that looked like this:
~array([0,1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1,0,-1,-2])
And it gave the output:
array([-1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -5, -4, -3, -2, -1, 0, 1])
Does the unary operator (~) take an array and apply A -> -(A+1)
If so, whats the point?
Chris Lutz’ comment is correct.
~ is the bitwise negation operator
It looks like it turns A to -(A+1) because on many modern computers, negative numbers are represented as the Two’s Complement of the corresponding positive integer, where the number is subtracted from
2^(bit length)(that’s “two to the power of bit length”, not “two exclusive or bit length”…).In such a system, -1 would be represented as all ones.
Of course, so would the sum of a number and its bitwise negative, so we have the situation where
as you noticed.