The following only assumes 2’s complement with at least 16 bits:
int mask = ~0x7FFF;
return !(x&mask)|!(~x&mask);
That uses a 15-bit constant; if that is too big, you can construct it from three smaller constants, but that will push it over the 8-operator limit.
An equivalent way of writing that is:
int m = 0x7FFF;
return !(x&~m)|!~(x|m);
But it’s still 7 operations, so int m = (0x7F<<8)|0xFF;
would still push it to 9. (I only added it because I don’t think I’ve ever before found a use for !~
.)
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solved Invalid solution for code challenge with operator restrictions