Maybe we are just quibbling over semantics but the compiler intrinsic here is '__builtin_popcount'. 'stdc_count_ones' is a standard library element that presumably will be implemented using the intrinsic.
And FWIW all major C/C++ have for a long time have had a an intrinsic for this. In clang it even has the same name, Visual Studio it's something like just '_popcount'. So it has long been easy to roll your own macro that works everywhere.
> An example you'll see in say a modern C compiler is that if you write the obvious loop to calculate how many bits are set in an int, the actual machine code on a brand new CPU should be a single population count instruction, C provides neither intrinsics (like Rust) not a dedicated "popcount" feature, so you can't write that but it's obviously what you want here and yup an optimising C compiler will do that.
C compilers definitely have intrinsics for this, for GCC for instance it is `__builtin_popcount`.
And apparently it has even standard language support for it since C23, it's `stdc_count_ones` [1] and in C++ you have `std::popcount` [2]
And FWIW all major C/C++ have for a long time have had a an intrinsic for this. In clang it even has the same name, Visual Studio it's something like just '_popcount'. So it has long been easy to roll your own macro that works everywhere.