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?
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6sizeof(variable);– DarrenFeb 11, 2013 at 15:24
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1This question is not a duplicate of close reason and should be reopened.– Klas LindbäckFeb 11, 2013 at 15:39
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1@Steven: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_data_types seems to have the information you seek.– Klas LindbäckFeb 11, 2013 at 15:40
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A very related question about C++ data types size of int, long, etc.– Bo PerssonFeb 11, 2013 at 19:18
6 Answers
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).
Only char
is guaranteed to be 1
byte by the standard.
Rest of the types have implementation defined sizes.
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1Indeed, 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
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
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 thesizeof(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 uselimits.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.
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.
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3
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@Toon - yeah he can still use the sizeof operator to determine them himself.– DarrenFeb 11, 2013 at 15:29
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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.– junixFeb 11, 2013 at 16:50
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.
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1
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1It'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.– junixFeb 11, 2013 at 16:51