58

I was looking at the question Single quotes vs. double quotes in C or C++. I couldn't completely understand the explanation given so I wrote a program:

#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
  char ch = 'a';
  printf("sizeof(ch) :%d\n", sizeof(ch));
  printf("sizeof(\'a\') :%d\n", sizeof('a'));
  printf("sizeof(\"a\") :%d\n", sizeof("a"));
  printf("sizeof(char) :%d\n", sizeof(char));
  printf("sizeof(int) :%d\n", sizeof(int));
  return 0;
}

I compiled them using both gcc and g++ and these are my outputs:

gcc:

sizeof(ch)   : 1  
sizeof('a')  : 4  
sizeof("a")  : 2  
sizeof(char) : 1  
sizeof(int)  : 4  

g++:

sizeof(ch)   : 1  
sizeof('a')  : 1  
sizeof("a")  : 2  
sizeof(char) : 1  
sizeof(int)  : 4  

The g++ output makes sense to me and I don't have any doubt regarding that. In gcc, what is the need to have sizeof('a') to be different from sizeof(char)? Is there some actual reason behind it or is it just historical?

Also in C if char and 'a' have different size, does that mean that when we write char ch = 'a';, we are doing implicit type-conversion?

2
  • 1
    possible duplicate of Size of character ('a') in C/C++
    – Bo Persson
    May 15, 2012 at 20:16
  • 1
    I'm actually surprised by sizeof("a") : 2 - all these years, and I always assumed that would be the same as sizeof(char*) - I might have actually used it if I had known otherwise.
    – user180247
    May 22, 2012 at 19:28

2 Answers 2

61

In C, character constants such as 'a' have type int, in C++ it's char.

Regarding the last question, yes,

char ch = 'a';

causes an implicit conversion of the int to char.

6
  • +1: @Pratt: in 1970s C usage, int was the return type for getc(). It uses -1 to indicate EOF which was also a handy convention for many other things frequently done with char expressions, like indexing into an array for character-break processing, char string transformation (like stricmp()) etc.
    – wallyk
    May 15, 2012 at 18:43
  • 3
    @wallyk: getc() still returns int, and it still returns EOF to indicate that there are no more characters to be read. EOF is defined to be a negative int value; it's typically -1. May 15, 2012 at 18:54
  • 3
    And the reason C++ changed the rules is because you can overload functions.
    – Jesse Good
    May 15, 2012 at 21:18
  • Very nice topic,answer and comments. :)
    – The Mask
    May 15, 2012 at 23:03
  • @KeithThompson the int returned by getc and friends is a different sort of int to the character constants though! Character constants may be negative, but the getc are all non-negative values. What would be negative character values are adjusted modulo UCHAR_MAX+1.
    – M.M
    Sep 26, 2016 at 9:09
1

because there is no char just intgers linked int a character

like a is 62 i guess

if you try printf("%c",62); you will see a character

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