
Issue #20163 has been updated by byroot (Jean Boussier).
but since many other languages, even Python, provide support for popcount, why not?
Usually a higher bar than that is required for a new method to be added to Ruby. I personally don't have an immediate use case to point to (except for Aaron's gem of course). But more generally, in recent years we've tried to eliminate or at least reduce the need for C extensions, and bit operation are often useful in these cases, so I'm sympathetic to more bit oriented capacities. ---------------------------------------- Feature #20163: Introduce #bit_count method on Integer https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/20163#change-114449 * Author: garrison (Garrison Jensen) * Status: Open ---------------------------------------- This feature request is to implement a method called #bit_count on Integer that returns the number of ones in the binary representation of the absolute value of the integer. ``` n = 19 n.bit_count #=> 3 (-n).bit_count #=> 3 ``` This is often useful when you use an integer as a bitmask and want to count how many bits are set. This would be equivalent to ``` n.to_s(2).count("1") ``` However, this can be outperformed by ``` def bit_count(n) count = 0 while n > 0 n &= n - 1 # Flip the least significant 1 bit to 0 count += 1 end count end ``` I think this would be a useful addition because it would fit alongside the other bit-related methods defined on integer: `#bit_length,` `#allbits?`, `#anybits?`, `#nobits?`. Also, when working with bitmasks, a minor upgrade to performance often results in a significant improvement. Similar methods from other languages: https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#int.bit_count https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.i32.html#method.count_ones -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/