3

I have found varying answers to this question, and I know there must be one definitive answer. What is the minimum allocated memory size of the four main data types in C? int, double, float, and char are what I'm thinking of. Do the signed or unsigned types alter the size in any way?

4

6 Answers 6

9

ANSI C defines the following sizes for the various primitive data types.

  • char
    • minimum signed range: -128 .. 127
    • minimum unsigned range: 0 .. 255
    • can be larger, but regardless of size, sizeof(char) == 1
    • sizeof(unsigned char) == 1
  • short
    • minimum signed range: -32768 .. 32767
    • minimum unsigned range: 0 .. 65535
    • can be larger
  • long
    • minimum signed range: -2147483648 .. 2147483647
    • minimum unsigned range: 0 .. 4294967295
    • can be larger
  • int
    • must have, at a miminum, the same range as a short
    • can have the same range as a long
    • cannot have a range larger than a long
    • short <= int, and int <= long, but short < long

There are a bunch more rules for floats and doubles, but generally, the range of a float is <= the range of a double (for modern machines---float is 4 bytes, double is 8).

2

Only char is guaranteed to be 1 byte by the standard.
Rest of the types have implementation defined sizes.

1
  • 1
    Indeed, but be aware that 1 byte may not be an octet. There are platforms where bytes are 32 bits wide. Feb 11, 2013 at 16:12
2

Do the signed or unsigned types alter the size in any way?

No. It only affects the range of data held. See example below for short data type ( 2 bytes).

  • signed −32,768 to +32,767
  • unsigned 0 to 65,535
1

This is a great question. I refer you to C99 6.2.5. And the Wikipedia C data types article is fine.

  • char is large enough to store any member of the basic execution character set. It is not a byte (as defined by 8 bits), and a good way of thinking about it is that it is the minimum addressable/allocatable unit (MAU), as you write in your question, but on some systems is not a byte.
  • ints are sort of interesting. I think they are supposed to hold a minimum of 2^15-1 (16 bits), but I can't find it in C99 at the moment. In newer versions of the standard I believe they are actually defined as a minimum of 32 bits, because so many people assume that they are. But in general you must assume that they are implementation defined in terms of MAUs (sizeof()). Not only that, but the specification allows for padding bits (such as for error correction). So, on an 8 bit character system, if the sizeof(int) is 4, the maximum int is not necessarily 2^31-1, because the specification allows some of those bits to be used as "padding." Thus the only way to know for sure is to use limits.h!
  • float/double are also implementation defined although double is always bigger than a float. Commonly these are defined by the implementation as compatible with the IEEE-754 specification (which require a minimum of 32 and 64 bits respectively), but C99 does not require it. But if your char size is 32 bits, then the sizeof(float) may be only 1.

  • signed/unsigned do not change the size.

For these reasons <stdint.h> is one of the most important new additions to the C language. Prior to that it was extremely difficult to write cross-platform code.

0

You can use sizeof(variable):

As an example running this on my local machine:

sizeof (char)   = 1
sizeof (double) = 8
sizeof (float)  = 4
sizeof (int)    = 4
sizeof (long)   = 4
sizeof (long long)  = 8
sizeof (short)  = 2
sizeof (void *) = 4

Note: the values you get may be determined by OS/Compiler/CPU architecture.

4
  • 3
    Sizes are platform and compiler specific. Feb 11, 2013 at 15:27
  • @Toon - yeah he can still use the sizeof operator to determine them himself.
    – Darren
    Feb 11, 2013 at 15:29
  • Yup, sizeof is safe. But the fixed values can be confusing. Feb 11, 2013 at 15:30
  • 1
    @DarrenDavies Unfortunately your posting does not indicate that the values you published are only examples. And that's exactly the information that is important here.
    – junix
    Feb 11, 2013 at 16:50
-1

Write a little test program and see for yourself:

int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
    printf("%d\n", sizeof(char) );
    printf("%d\n", sizeof(int) );
    printf("%d\n", sizeof(unsigned char) );
    printf("%d\n", sizeof(unsigned int) );
    printf("%d\n", sizeof(double) );
    printf("%d\n", sizeof(float) );
    return 0;
}

"int, float, double" is platform-dependent ( 16, 32, 64). sign does not affect size, only interpretation.

2
  • 1
    %zu, not %d. sizeof returns size_t, not int. Feb 11, 2013 at 15:32
  • 1
    It's important to notice that the result will differ depending on whatever platform you compile for. I suggest you add this to your answer, Leor.
    – junix
    Feb 11, 2013 at 16:51

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.