bitLength property

int get bitLength

Returns the minimum number of bits required to store this big integer.

The number of bits excludes the sign bit, which gives the natural length for non-negative (unsigned) values. Negative values are complemented to return the bit position of the first bit that differs from the sign bit.

To find the number of bits needed to store the value as a signed value, add one, i.e. use x.bitLength + 1.

x.bitLength == (-x-1).bitLength;

Signal(BigInt.from(3)).bitLength == 2;   // 00000011
Signal(BigInt.from(2)).bitLength == 2;   // 00000010
Signal(BigInt.from(1)).bitLength == 1;   // 00000001
Signal(BigInt.from(0)).bitLength == 0;   // 00000000
Signal(BigInt.from(-1)).bitLength == 0;  // 11111111
Signal(BigInt.from(-2)).bitLength == 1;  // 11111110
Signal(BigInt.from(-3)).bitLength == 2;  // 11111101
Signal(BigInt.from(-4)).bitLength == 2;  // 11111100

Implementation

int get bitLength => value.bitLength;