Elementwise computes the bitwise AND of x
and y
.
tf.bitwise.bitwise_and(
x, y, name=None
)
The result will have those bits set, that are set in both x
and y
. The
computation is performed on the underlying representations of x
and y
.
import tensorflow as tf
from tensorflow.python.ops import bitwise_ops
dtype_list = [tf.int8, tf.int16, tf.int32, tf.int64,
tf.uint8, tf.uint16, tf.uint32, tf.uint64]
for dtype in dtype_list:
lhs = tf.constant([0, 5, 3, 14], dtype=dtype)
rhs = tf.constant([5, 0, 7, 11], dtype=dtype)
exp = tf.constant([0, 0, 3, 10], dtype=tf.float32)
res = bitwise_ops.bitwise_and(lhs, rhs)
tf.assert_equal(tf.cast(res, tf.float32), exp) # TRUE
x
: A Tensor
. Must be one of the following types: int8
, int16
, int32
, int64
, uint8
, uint16
, uint32
, uint64
.y
: A Tensor
. Must have the same type as x
.name
: A name for the operation (optional).A Tensor
. Has the same type as x
.