Integer datatype in C: int, short, long and long long
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Every programming language has in-built types to differentiate between the nature of various data (input or output or intermediate). Integer is a common data type which is widely use in general programming and in scientific computing.
Integer is defined as a number which has no fractional component. Numbers which have a fractional component is known floating point numbers. Despite the fact that floating point numbers can represent numbers accurately, integers have their own place in the world of computing due to:
- Integers consumes significantly less space than Floating point numbers
- Calculations using integers are much faster (over 2 times) due to hardware architecture
In C programming language, integer data is represented by its own datatype known as int. It has several variants which differs based on memory consumption includes:
- int
- long
- short
- long long
Usage
In C, one can define an integer variable as:
int main()
{
int a = 1;
short b = 1;
long c = 1;
long long d = 1;
}
Signed and Unsigned version
As the range of numbers determined by a datatype like int is limited and both negative and positive numbers are required, we have two options:
- signed integers: range is equally divided among negative and positive numbers (including 0)
- unsigned integers: range starts from 0 to the upper positive number limit
Hence, unsigned integers are used when:
- negative numbers are not required
- increase the range of positive number by double
One can defined an unsigned integer by placing the keyword unsigned before the usual declaration/ initialization like:
int main()
{
unsigned int a = 1;
unsigned long b = 1;
}
The default declaration is the signed version signed.
Hence, there are 8 possible types for integer:
- int
- unsigned int
- short
- unsigned short
- long
- unsigned long
- long long
- unsigned long long
Format specifier
To print a value in C using printf, one needs to specify the datatype of the data to be printed. The format specifier of each variant of integer datatype is different in C.
For instance, int datatype has %d as the format specifier.
Following code demonstrates the idea:
int main()
{
unsigned int a = 1;
int b = 1;
unsigned long c = 1;
long long d = 1;
printf("%u", a);
printf("%d", b);
printf("%lu", c);
printf("%lld", d);
}
Range and memory consumption
One can find the memory consumed by a data type as follows:
int main()
{
printf("size of int : %d\n",sizeof(int));
printf("size of signed int : %d\n",sizeof(signed int));
printf("size of unsigned long : %d\n",sizeof(unsigned long));
return 0;
}
Ideally, memory consumed by the signed and unsigned variants are the same. It only differs in the range.
If Integer data type int is of 4 bytes, then the range is calculated as follows:
4 bytes = 4 X 8 = 32 bits
Each bit can store 2 values (0 and 1)
Hence, integer data type can hold 2^32 values
In signed version, the most significant bit is reserved for sign. So, 0 denotes positive number and 1 denotes negative number.
Hence
- range of unsigned int is 0 to 2^32-1
- range of signed int is -2^31 to 2^31-1
The exact value of memory and range depends on the hardware but remains same across several hardware types. Following table summarizes the values:
Data type | Size (in Bytes) | Range | Format specifier |
---|---|---|---|
int | 4 | -2147483648 to 2147483647 | %d |
unsigned int | 4 | 0 to 4294967295 | %u |
short | 2 | -32768 to 32767 | %hd |
unsigned short | 2 | 0 to 65535 | %hu |
long | 8 | -9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807 | %ld |
unsigned long | 8 | 0 to 18446744073709551615 | %lu |
long long | 8 | -9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807 | %lld |
unsigned long long | 8 | 0 to 18446744073709551615 | %llu |
In some platforms, long long and long refer to the same size but in other platforms, long long can be double the size of long.
In general, the rules are:
- signed and unsigned version will have the same size
- size of int is 4 bytes
- size of short <= size of int
- size of int <= size of long
- size of long <= size of long long
Integer overflow
As we have seen that each integer datatype has a fixed range beyond which it will fail. In case, a number falls beyond the range of a datatype, then the code will wrap around to give an errorneous result.
Consider the case of int where the range is -2147483648 to 2147483647.
Key points to note in case of signed int are:
- The number after 2147483647 is -2147483648.
- The number after -2147483648 is -2147483647
- 2147483648 is represented as -2147483648 as it is wrapped around
In case of unsigned int, how is 4294967296 stored?
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