1

The following C program is for finding the value of formula (a+b)^2.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <conio.h>
void main()
{
int a ,b , c;
clrscr ();
printf ("\n ENTER THE VALUE OF A AND B:");
scanf("%d %d", &a,&b);
c = a*a + b*b +2*a*b;
printf(" \n THE FINAL RESULT IS = %d ", c);
getche();
}

Upon running, when I enter the value for a and b as 1 and 88888, then it gives -688680271 as answer:

" ENTER THE VALUE OF A AND B:1 88888 THE FINAL RESULT IS = -688680271 "

But the answer is wrong, it should be 7901254321. Please help. Thx

2
  • 2
    try with smaller input
    – raj
    Apr 23, 2014 at 10:04
  • Also, while it is not actually relevant to the current error, try displaying the input (printf("a=%d, b=%d\n", a, b)) to make sure they were parsed correctly. It wouldn't have helped here, but it's a good "first step" to debugging "wrong output" errors.
    – Medinoc
    Apr 23, 2014 at 10:06

7 Answers 7

4

Do you know that an int is normally only 32 bits wide?

88888 * 88888 = 7901076544

Which already requires 33 bits to represent. You have an integer overflow. Try using long long int as your type.

long long int a ,b , c;
// ...
scanf("%lld %lld", &a,&b);
// ...
printf(" \n THE FINAL RESULT IS = %lld ", c);
2
  • Tried. Same answer as before :/ Apr 23, 2014 at 10:05
  • @user3551432 Which compiler and OS (including the versions) are you using?
    – Medinoc
    Apr 23, 2014 at 10:06
2

You are using int which doesn't have the range of output you are expecting Use long long int

1
  • Tried long long int. Tried. Same answer as before :/ Apr 23, 2014 at 10:05
0

Perhaps you're on a system where the precision of int is lacking. Your use of the vintage clrscr() function indicates this. Try using long long instead. You will need to change the I/O code to use the proper format specifiers. Also, you should check that scanf() succeeded before relying on the result.

0

What you're experiencing is called "integer overflow". Simply spoken a int has not enough bits to hold the number 88888^2. When you make that multiplication the result will overflow the limits of an int. When an int overflows the results are undefined; however in most cases you end up with a negative number.

0

In Simple Words -int can hold upto 4 Digits .try long int or long Double.'

#include <stdio.h>
#include <conio.h>
void main()
{
int a ,b , c;
clrscr ();
printf ("\n ENTER THE VALUE OF A AND B:");
scanf("%d %d", &a,&b);
c = a*a + b*b +2*a*b;
printf(" \n THE FINAL RESULT IS = %d ", c);  
getche();
}
1
  • Any reason to re-post the original code without any change? Apr 23, 2014 at 12:05
0

use data type long instead of using int. the data type 'int' supports the values upto 32,768 only. it won't support 88888 because it is larger than 32,768.

0

You should check the range of values that a data type can hold. This will give you an idea:

short int and int: -32,767 to 32,767
unsigned short int and unsigned int: 0 to 65,535
long int: -2,147,483,647 to 2,147,483,647
unsigned long int: 0 to 4,294,967,295

Accordingly, your variable 'b' should at least be long int and variable 'c' should at least be long long int. Below code should work:

....
int a;
long int b;
long long int c;
....
printf ("\n ENTER THE VALUE OF A AND B:");
scanf("%d %ld", &a,&b);
c = a*a + b*b +2*a*b;
printf(" \n THE FINAL RESULT IS = %lld ", c);
....

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