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Is XOR Distributive over Addition?

 3 years ago
source link: https://richardstartin.github.io/posts/is-xor-distributive-over-addition
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Is XOR Distributive over Addition?

Nov 10, 2017 | Richard Startin |

Google search console has become a thing of mild interest to me since I moved my website and Google forgot about my content. Impressions - search terms that match your site but don’t lead to a click - are full of fascinating false positives. I looked at some of my impressions. These search terms are:

is xor associative over addition?

The highlighted term “is xor distributive over addition” jumped out at me.

Since multiplication obviously does distribute over addition (ignoring overflow), it’s perhaps a reasonable question to ask. To disprove this proposition, it is enough to find a single counterexample (not hard, and much quicker than a google search) but it’s more interesting to find a constructive class of counterexamples. I thought of a few strategies to disprove this, other than picking random numbers and checking, that I thought were worth writing down.

Tangentially, on the topic of Google relevance, this search term had nothing to do with this blog until this post, but when I search for topics I think my posts are related to, I can’t find them. I expect not to be seeing “is xor distributive over addition” in the search console in future.

Complement Argument

Would XOR distribute over the addition of a number and its logical complement? We would have that y ^ (x + ~x) = y ^ x + y ^ ~x for any y. Then we have y ^ -1 = ~y = y ^ x + y ^ ~x. So based on the assumption of distributivity, y ^ x + y ^ ~x must have none of the bits from y. We have a contradiction because it is clear that all of the bits in y ^ x + y ^ ~x are set.

Left Shift Argument

Addition causes digits to carry left when the bits in the same position are both set, so x + x is equivalent to x << 1 (ignoring overflow). If, for any integer y, we had that y ^ (x + x) = y ^ x + y ^ x we can find constraints on this identity by considering either the rightmost unset bit or the leftmost set bit of x in isolation. Considering the rightmost set bit at position p: this bit is set on the LHS of this identity if and only if it is unset in y. On the RHS, it is set iff its leftmost neighbour at position p-1 is unset in y, because we shift y ^ x to the left. So we can construct counterexamples whenever p and p-1 differ, and the proposition is not generally true.


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