Steven D'Aprano wrote: > I have some bit-twiddling code written in Java which I am trying to port > to Python. I'm not getting the same results though, and I think the > problem is due to differences between Java's signed byte/int/long types, > and Python's unified long integer type. E.g. Java's >>> is not exactly > the same as Python's >> operator, and a character coerced to a byte in > Java is not the same as ord(char) in Python. (The Java byte is in the > range -128...127, I think, while the ord in Python is in 0...255.) > > Can anyone point me to some good resources to help me port the Java code > to Python? > > If it helps, the Java code includes bits like this: > > long newSeed = (seed & 0xFFFFFFFFL) * 0x41A7L; > while (newSeed >= 0x80000000L) { > newSeed = (newSeed & 0x7FFFFFFFL) + (newSeed >>> 31L); > } > seed = (newSeed == 0x7FFFFFFFL) ? 0 : (int)newSeed; > > > which I've translated into: > > newseed = (seed & 0xFFFFFFFF)*0x41A7 > while (newseed >= 0x80000000): > newseed = (newseed & 0x7FFFFFFF) + (newseed >> 31) > seed = 0 if newseed == 0x7FFFFFFF else newseed & 0xFFFFFFFF
I think you need to take negative ints into account. Try adding if seed & 0x80000000: # 2**31 seed -= 0x100000000 # 2**32, two's complement -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list