What does this line of code mean in non-code speak?

if (div4 & ~( xor(div100, div400)))
div4 div100 and div400 are given by:
div4 = ((year/4) == floor (year/4));
div100 = ((year/100) == floor (year/100));
div400 = ((year/400) == floor (year/400));

 Respuesta aceptada

Wayne King
Wayne King el 15 de Jun. de 2013
Editada: Wayne King el 15 de Jun. de 2013
div4, div100, and div400 are all logical variables, 1 or 0.
if (div4 & ~(xor(div100,div400)))
says "if div4 is true (1) and div100 and div400 are both false or both are true, do something"
~xor(div100,div400)
equals 1 (true) only if both div100 and div400 are false or both are true

4 comentarios

per isakson
per isakson el 15 de Jun. de 2013
xor(A,B) is true if one of A and B is true, else false
Wayne King
Wayne King el 15 de Jun. de 2013
Editada: Wayne King el 15 de Jun. de 2013
right, ~xor(A,B) is true only if both are false or both are true (I forgot the both are true condition)
~xor(1,0)
~xor(0,1)
~xor(1,1)
~xor(0,0)
Yes,
not( [ xor(1,0), xor(0,1), xor(1,1), xor(0,0) ] )
returns
ans =
0 0 1 1
J
J el 16 de Jun. de 2013
Many thanks. Couldn't wrap my head around the latter part of it.

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Más respuestas (2)

Roger Stafford
Roger Stafford el 16 de Jun. de 2013
In other words, this logical statement is true when 'year' is to be a leap year under the Gregorian calendar. They could just as well have written
if div4&(div100==div400)
or, given the definitions of these quantities,
if div4&(div100<=div400)
or, again given their definitions, even this
if div400|(div4~=div100)

Categorías

Preguntada:

J
J
el 15 de Jun. de 2013

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by