Is the integer constant's default type signed or unsigned? such as 0x80000000, how can I to decide to use it as a signed integer constant or unsigned integer constant without any suffix?
If it is a signed integer constant, how to explain following case?
printf("0x80000000>>3 : %x\n", 0x80000000>>3);
output:
0x80000000>>3 : 10000000
The below case can indicate my platform uses arithmetic bitwise shift, not logic bitwise shift:
int n = 0x80000000;
printf("n>>3: %x\n", n>>3);
output:
n>>3: f0000000
0x80000000
isINT_MAX + 1
, so it's unsigned. Hence logical shift in the first example. But when you assign it to anint
, you invoke undefined behaviour, and typically the result isINT_MIN
. Left shifting negative integers is implementation-defined, often arithmetic shift is used. The difference is that in the latter, you force it to a signed type.INT_MAX + 1
is UB butint n = 0x80000000;
is not UB but implementation-defined and the integer conversion in this case is ruled by 6.3.1.3p3 (in C99)INT_MAX + 1
was meant as a mathematical expression, not C. It's correct, however, that converting that toint
isn't undefined behaviour, but implementation-defined. My bad.