I want to write a function named bitCount() in the file: bitcount.c that returns the number of bits in the binary representation of its unsigned integer argument.
Here is what I have so far:
#include <stdio.h>
int bitCount (unsigned int n);
int main () {
printf ("# 1-bits in base 2 representation of %u = %d, should be 0\n",
0, bitCount (0));
printf ("# 1-bits in base 2 representation of %u = %d, should be 1\n",
1, bitCount (1));
printf ("# 1-bits in base 2 representation of %u = %d, should be 16\n",
2863311530u, bitCount (2863311530u));
printf ("# 1-bits in base 2 representation of %u = %d, should be 1\n",
536870912, bitCount (536870912));
printf ("# 1-bits in base 2 representation of %u = %d, should be 32\n",
4294967295u, bitCount (4294967295u));
return 0;
}
int bitCount (unsigned int n) {
/* your code here */
}
Okay, when I just run this I get:
# 1-bits in base 2 representation of 0 = 1, should be 0
# 1-bits in base 2 representation of 1 = 56, should be 1
# 1-bits in base 2 representation of 2863311530 = 57, should be 16
# 1-bits in base 2 representation of 536870912 = 67, should be 1
# 1-bits in base 2 representation of 4294967295 = 65, should be 32
RUN SUCCESSFUL (total time: 14ms)
It doesn’t return the correct numbers of bits.
What’s the best way to return the number of bits in the binary representation of its unsigned integer argument in C?
1 Answer