The tilde operator in Python
What's the usage of the tilde operator in Python?
One thing I can think about is do something in both sides of a string or list, such as check if a string is palindromic or not:
def is_palindromic(s):
return all(s[i] == s[~i] for i in range(len(s) / 2))
Any other good usage?
Solution 1:
It is a unary operator (taking a single argument) that is borrowed from C, where all data types are just different ways of interpreting bytes. It is the "invert" or "complement" operation, in which all the bits of the input data are reversed.
In Python, for integers, the bits of the twos-complement representation of the integer are reversed (as in b <- b XOR 1
for each individual bit), and the result interpreted again as a twos-complement integer. So for integers, ~x
is equivalent to (-x) - 1
.
The reified form of the ~
operator is provided as operator.invert
. To support this operator in your own class, give it an __invert__(self)
method.
>>> import operator
>>> class Foo:
... def __invert__(self):
... print 'invert'
...
>>> x = Foo()
>>> operator.invert(x)
invert
>>> ~x
invert
Any class in which it is meaningful to have a "complement" or "inverse" of an instance that is also an instance of the same class is a possible candidate for the invert operator. However, operator overloading can lead to confusion if misused, so be sure that it really makes sense to do so before supplying an __invert__
method to your class. (Note that byte-strings [ex: '\xff'
] do not support this operator, even though it is meaningful to invert all the bits of a byte-string.)
Solution 2:
~
is the bitwise complement operator in python which essentially calculates -x - 1
So a table would look like
i ~i
-----
0 -1
1 -2
2 -3
3 -4
4 -5
5 -6
So for i = 0
it would compare s[0]
with s[len(s) - 1]
, for i = 1
, s[1]
with s[len(s) - 2]
.
As for your other question, this can be useful for a range of bitwise hacks.