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Full Discussion: bit manipulation
Top Forums Programming bit manipulation Post 302716139 by hergp on Tuesday 16th of October 2012 03:43:06 AM
Old 10-16-2012
I think it's mostly semantics. If you use the shift operator, you emphasise on a certain bit pattern at a specific bit offset in a variable. In Don Cragun's example, the emphasis is on the the fact, that the values 017, 01, ... are stored at an offset of 12 bits from the least significant bit of the variable.

If you use the shift operator on variables, it is faster than a multiplication in most cases.
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DROP 
OPERATOR(7) PostgreSQL 9.2.7 Documentation DROP OPERATOR(7) NAME
DROP_OPERATOR - remove an operator SYNOPSIS
DROP OPERATOR [ IF EXISTS ] name ( { left_type | NONE } , { right_type | NONE } ) [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ] DESCRIPTION
DROP OPERATOR drops an existing operator from the database system. To execute this command you must be the owner of the operator. PARAMETERS
IF EXISTS Do not throw an error if the operator does not exist. A notice is issued in this case. name The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing operator. left_type The data type of the operator's left operand; write NONE if the operator has no left operand. right_type The data type of the operator's right operand; write NONE if the operator has no right operand. CASCADE Automatically drop objects that depend on the operator. RESTRICT Refuse to drop the operator if any objects depend on it. This is the default. EXAMPLES
Remove the power operator a^b for type integer: DROP OPERATOR ^ (integer, integer); Remove the left unary bitwise complement operator ~b for type bit: DROP OPERATOR ~ (none, bit); Remove the right unary factorial operator x! for type bigint: DROP OPERATOR ! (bigint, none); COMPATIBILITY
There is no DROP OPERATOR statement in the SQL standard. SEE ALSO
CREATE OPERATOR (CREATE_OPERATOR(7)), ALTER OPERATOR (ALTER_OPERATOR(7)) PostgreSQL 9.2.7 2014-02-17 DROP OPERATOR(7)
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