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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T13:51:04+00:00 2026-05-10T13:51:04+00:00

I’m trying to implement a data compression idea I’ve had, and since I’m imagining

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I’m trying to implement a data compression idea I’ve had, and since I’m imagining running it against a large corpus of test data, I had thought to code it in C (I mostly have experience in scripting languages like Ruby and Tcl.)

Looking through the O’Reilly ‘cow’ books on C, I realize that I can’t simply index the bits of a simple ‘char’ or ‘int’ type variable as I’d like to to do bitwise comparisons and operators.

Am I correct in this perception? Is it reasonable for me to use an enumerated type for representing a bit (and make an array of these, and writing functions to convert to and from char)? If so, is such a type and functions defined in a standard library already somewhere? Are there other (better?) approaches? Is there some example code somewhere that someone could point me to?

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  1. 2026-05-10T13:51:04+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 1:51 pm

    Following on from what Kyle has said, you can use a macro to do the hard work for you.

    It is possible.

    To set the nth bit, use OR:

    x |= (1 << 5); // sets the 6th-from right

    To clear a bit, use AND:

    x &= ~(1 << 5); // clears 6th-from-right

    To flip a bit, use XOR:

    x ^= (1 << 5); // flips 6th-from-right

    Or…

    #define GetBit(var, bit) ((var & (1 << bit)) != 0) // Returns true / false if bit is set #define SetBit(var, bit) (var |= (1 << bit)) #define FlipBit(var, bit) (var ^= (1 << bit)) 

    Then you can use it in code like:

    int myVar = 0; SetBit(myVar, 5); if (GetBit(myVar, 5)) {   // Do something } 
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