The C language defines several integer data types: integer, short integer, long integer, and character, all in both signed and unsigned varieties. The GNU C compiler extends the language to contain long long integers as well. The C integer types were intended to allow code to be portable among machines with different inherent data sizes (word sizes), so each type may have different ranges on different machines. The problem with this is that a program often needs to be written for a particular range of integers, and sometimes must be written for a particular size of storage, regardless of what machine the program runs on.
To address this problem, the GNU C Library contains C type definitions you can use to declare integers that meet your exact needs. Because the GNU C Library header files are customized to a specific machine, your program source code doesn't have to be.
These typedef
s are in stdint.h.
If you require that an integer be represented in exactly N bits, use one
of the following types, with the obvious mapping to bit size and signedness:
If your C compiler and target machine do not allow integers of a certain size, the corresponding above type does not exist.
If you don't need a specific storage size, but want the smallest data structure with at least N bits, use one of these:
If you don't need a specific storage size, but want the data structure that allows the fastest access while having at least N bits (and among data structures with the same access speed, the smallest one), use one of these:
If you want an integer with the widest range possible on the platform on which it is being used, use one of the following. If you use these, you should write code that takes into account the variable size and range of the integer.
The GNU C Library also provides macros that tell you the maximum and
minimum possible values for each integer data type. The macro names
follow these examples: INT32_MAX
, UINT8_MAX
,
INT_FAST32_MIN
, INT_LEAST64_MIN
, UINTMAX_MAX
,
INTMAX_MAX
, INTMAX_MIN
. Note that there are no macros for
unsigned integer minima. These are always zero.
There are similar macros for use with C's built in integer types which
should come with your C compiler. These are described in Data Type Measurements.
Don't forget you can use the C sizeof
function with any of these
data types to get the number of bytes of storage each uses.