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Exclusive-or)
In logic, the treatment of the word or requires a little care (for a native English speaker; some other languages have greater precision). Exclusive disjunction is the sense of the word or as in the proverb you can have your cake or eat it (but not both). The exclusive disjunction of propositions A and B means A or B, but not both. In logic, unqualified disjunction is normally understood to mean the inclusive sense.
More formally exclusive disjunction is a logical operator. The operation yields the result TRUE when one, and only one, of its operands is TRUE. The exclusive disjunction of propositions A and B is usually called A xor B, where "xor" stands for "exclusive or" and is pronounced "eks-or".
For two inputs A and B, the truth table of the function is as follows.
| A | B | A xor B
|
| F | F | F
|
| F | T | T
|
| T | F | T
|
| T | T | F
|
It can be deduced from this table that
- (A xor B) ⇔ (A and not B) or (not A and B) ⇔ (A or B) and (not A or not B) ⇔ (A or B) and not (A and B)
For more than two inputs, xor can be applied to the first two inputs, and then
the result can be xor'ed with each subsequent input:
- (A xor B xor C xor D) ⇔ (((A xor B) xor C) xor D)
Because xor is associative, the order of the inputs does not matter: the same result will be obtained regardless of order.
In general, the result of xor depends on the number of TRUE operands, if
there are an odd number of TRUE operands, then the result will be TRUE,
otherwise it will be FALSE.
The mathematical symbol for exclusive disjunction varies in the literature.
In addition to the abbreviation "xor", one may see
- a plus sign ("+") or a plus sign that is modified in some way, such as being put inside a circle ("<math>\oplus<math>"); this is used because exclusive disjunction corresponds to addition modulo 2 if F = 0 and T = 1.
- a vee that is modified in some way, such as being underlined ("∨"); this is used because exclusive disjunction is a modification of ordinary (inclusive) disjunction, which is typically denoted by a vee ("∨").
- a caret ("^"), as in the C programming language
Similarly, different textual notations are used, including "EOR" (with the same expansion as "xor") and "orr" (modelled on iff, of which it is the negative).
Binary values xor'ed by themselves are always zero.
In some computer architectures, it is faster, or takes less space, to store a zero in a
register by xor'ing the value with itself instead of loading and storing
the value zero. Thus, on some computer architectures, xor'ing values
with themselves is a common optimization.
The xor operation is sometimes used as a simple mixing function in cryptography, for example, with one-time pad or Feistel network systems.
In digital logic design, a two-input xor logic gate is often thought of as a programmable inverter, in that if one input is held at a logic '1', the output will be the inverse of the other input. Otherwise, if one input is held at logic '0', the output will always be the same as the other input.
The xor operation is a more complex logical function than 'or' and 'and'. Neural networks require an extra processing layer to handle the added complexity.
See also
de:XOR-Gatter
fr:OU exclusif
ja:排他的論理和
pl:XOR
sv:XOR
he:XOR
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