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Home/ Questions/Q 9145949
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T10:38:24+00:00 2026-06-17T10:38:24+00:00

I’m currently developing a C program that needs to parse some bespoke data structures,

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I’m currently developing a C program that needs to parse some bespoke data structures, fortunately I know how they are structured, however I’m not sure of how to implement my parser in C.

Each of the structures are 32-bits in length, and each structure can be identified by it’s binary signature.

As an example, there are two particular structures that I’m interested in, and they have the following binary patterns (x means either 0 or 1)

 0000-00xx-xxxx-xxx0
 0000-10xx-10xx-xxx0

Within these structures the ‘x’ bits contain the actual data I need, so essentially I need a way of identifying each structure based on how the bits are written within each structure.

So as an example in pseudo-code:

if (binaryPattern = 000010xxxxxxxxx0) {
do something with it;
}

I’m guessing that reading them as ints, and then performing some kind of bitmasking would be the way to go, but my knowledge of C isn’t great, and maybe a simple logical OR operation would do it, but I just wanted some advice on doing this before I start.

Thanks

Thanks very much to everyone that has answered, very helpful!!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T10:38:25+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 10:38 am

    To check if your data matches a specific binary pattern, you can first mask out the non-signature bits, then compare it against a signature template.

    For example, to check if your data matches the 0000 10xx 10xx xxx0 signature:

    1. AND your input data with 1111 1100 1100 0001 (the mask)
    2. check if the output equals 0000 1000 1000 0000 (the template)

    To illustrate with some sample data:

    DATA_1   0010 1011 1101 1100                DATA_2   0000 1011 1010 1100
      MASK   1111 1100 1100 0001  &               MASK   1111 1100 1100 0001  &
            --------------------                        --------------------
             0010 1000 1100 0000 (NO_MATCH)              0000 1000 1000 0000 (MATCH)
            --------------------                        --------------------
    

    Each of you rules could therefore be represented by a mask-template pair and all you need is a function/operation that applies the above operation to your data to check if it is a match.

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