This performs bit mask operations upon 32-bit values thereby saving the need to ascii-ize the binary.

#! perl -slw use strict; sub getBits { my( $N32, $offset, $bits ) = @_; my $mask = 1 << $bits; $mask--; $mask <<= $offset; return ( $N32 & $mask ) >> $offset; } ## Encode some test data. my $data = unpack 'N', pack 'b*', #0123456789 123456789 123456789 1 '11101111101111111011111111101111'; # 7 31 127 511 15 print $data; ## 4160617975 print getBits( $data, 0, 3 ); ## Should be 7 print getBits( $data, 4, 5 ); ## should be 31 print getBits( $data, 10, 7 ); ## Should be 127 print getBits( $data, 18, 9 ); ## Should be 511 print getBits( $data, 28, 4 ); ## Should be 15 __END__ P:\test>test 4160617975 7 31 127 511 15

Examine what is said, not who speaks.
"Efficiency is intelligent laziness." -David Dunham
"Think for yourself!" - Abigail
"Memory, processor, disk in that order on the hardware side. Algorithm, algoritm, algorithm on the code side." - tachyon

In reply to Re^3: Reading individual bits by BrowserUk
in thread Reading individual bits by iKnowNothing

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