Given a certain integer x, I wish to compute the next higher integer y which has a certain hamming weight w. Mind that the hamming weight of x does not have to be w as well.
So, for example x = 10 (1010) and w = 4 the result should be y = 15 (1111).
Obviously, I could achieve this by just incrementing x but that would be a very slow solution for high numbers. Can I achieve this by the means of bit shifts somehow?
There are three cases: the Hamming weight (a.k.a. bitwise population count) is reduced, unchanged, or increased.
Increased Hamming weight
Set enough successive low-order 0-bits to achieve the desired weight.
This works because each successive low-order bit is the smallest value that you can add, and their sum is the smallest difference that will sufficiently increase the Hamming weight.
Unchanged Hamming weight
This works because the value of the lowest set bit is the lowest value that will cause a carry to occur. Adding any lower bit-value would simply set that bit, and increase the Hamming weight.
As long as addition "carries a one," bits will be cleared. The resulting weight must be the equal or reduced. If several bits are cleared due to a chain of carries, you'll need to increase the weight in compensation by setting low-order bits.
Reduced Hamming weight
This works because clearing low-order 1-bits finds the preceding number with the desired weight, by subtracting the smallest viable amount. From the preceding number of the correct weight, follow the "unchanged weight" algorithm to reach the next number.