Bitwise unsigned right shift (urshift, >>>)
Description
Creates a new column that shifts to the right the bits of the values in the first argument as many positions as specified in the second argument. The result is then transformed and given in decimal format.
Unlike the Bitwise right shift (rshift, >>) operation, this one doesn't preserve the sign of the original number and always fills the vacant positions left by the shifted bits with zeros. This means that for positive numbers, both the Bitwise right shift and Bitwise unsigned right shift operations will produce the same result, but they will return different outputs for negative numbers.
For more information about bitwise shifts, see this article.
How does it work in the search window?
Select Create column in the search window toolbar, then select the Bitwise unsigned right shift operation. You need to specify two arguments:
Argument | Data type | More information |
---|---|---|
Number mandatory | integer | Field whose values you want to transform. |
Number mandatory | integer | Number of places to shift to the right. |
The data type of the values in the new column is integer.
Example
We want to shift 2 positions to the right of the bits of the values in the posNumbers1_int column, and we don't want to preserve the sign bit. We will create a new column using the Bitwise unsigned right shift operation to do it. Let's call the new column urshift_2
The arguments needed to create the new column are:
Number - posNumbers1_int column
Number - Click the pencil icon and enter 2
Click Create column and you will see the following result:
How does it work in LINQ?
Use the operator select
... as
... and add the operation syntax to create the new column. These are the valid formats of the Bitwise unsigned right shift operation:
urshift(integer1, integer2)
integer1 >>> integer2
Example
You can copy the following LINQ scripts and try the above example on the my.upload.sample.data
table.
from my.upload.sample.data
select split(message, ";", 17) as posNumbers1
select int(posNumbers1) as posNumbers1_int
select urshift(posNumbers1_int, 2) as urshift_2
or
from my.upload.sample.data
select split(message, ";", 17) as posNumbers1
select int(posNumbers1) as posNumbers1_int
select posNumbers1_int >>> 2 as urshift_2