== Why is this an issue? Certain https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/visual-basic/programming-guide/language-features/operators-and-expressions/logical-and-bitwise-operators#bitwise-operations[bitwise operations] are not needed and should not be performed because their results are predictable. Specifically, using `And -1` with any value always results in the original value. That is because the binary representation of `-1` on a https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/visual-basic/programming-guide/language-features/data-types/numeric-data-types[numeric data type] supporting negative numbers, such as `Integer` or `Long`, is based on https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two%27s_complement[two's complement] and made of all 1s: `&B111...111`. Performing `And` between a value and `&B111...111` means applying the `And` operator to each bit of the value and the bit `1`, resulting in a value equal to the provided one, bit by bit. [source,vbnet] ---- anyValue And -1 ' Noncompliant anyValue ' Compliant ---- Similarly, `anyValue Or 0` always results in `anyValue`, because the binary representation of `0` is always `&B000...000` and the `Or` operator returns its first input when the second is `0`. [source,vbnet] ---- anyValue Or 0 ' Noncompliant anyValue ' Compliant ---- The same applies to `anyValue Xor 0`: the `Xor` operator returns `1` when its two input bits are different (`1` and `0` or `0` and `1`) and returns `0` when its two input bits are the same (both `0` or both `1`). When `Xor` is applied with `0`, the result would be `1` if the other input is `1`, because the two input bits are different, and `0` if the other input bit is `0`, because the two input are the same. That results in returning `anyValue`. [source,vbnet] ---- anyValue Xor 0 ' Noncompliant anyValue ' Compliant ---- include::../resources-dotnet.adoc[] include::../rspecator.adoc[]