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How to compare two bit values in C?

I've been dabbling around a bit with C and I find that being able to directly manipulate bits is fascinating and powerful (and dangerous I suppose). I was curious as to what the best way would be to compare different bits in C would be. For instance, the number 15 is represented in binary as:

00001111

And the number 13 is represented as:

00001101

How would you compare what bits are different without counting them? It would be easy to use shifts to determine that 15 contains 4 1s and 13 contains 3 1s, but how would you output the difference between the two (ex that the 2^1 spot is different between the two)? I just can't think of an easy way to do this. Any pointers would be much appreciated!

EDIT: I should have clarified that I know XOR is the right way to go about this problem, but I had an issue with implementation. I guess my issue was comparing one bit at a time (and not generating the difference per say). The solution I came up with is:

 void compare(int vector1, int vector2) {         
     int count = 0; 
     unsigned int xor = vector1 ^ vector2;

     while (count < bit_length) {
          if (xor % 2 == 1) { //would indicicate a difference
               printf("%d ", count);
          }
          xor >>= 1; 
          count++;
      }  
 }

Use bitwise operations:

c         = a         ^ b        ;
00000010b = 00001111b ^ 00001101b;

What ^ , or XOR, does is:

0 ^ 0 = 0
1 ^ 0 = 1
0 ^ 1 = 1
1 ^ 1 = 0

One way of thinking about it would be:

If the two operands ( a and b ) are different, the result is 1 .
If they are equal, the result is 0 .

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