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Is there a way to have a 64 bit enum in C++? Whilst refactoring some code I came across bunch of #defines which would be better as an enum, but being greater than 32 bit causes the compiler to error.

For some reason I thought the following might work:

enum MY_ENUM : unsigned __int64  
{  
    LARGE_VALUE = 0x1000000000000000,  
};
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8 Answers

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I don't think that's possible. The underlying representation of enums is up to the compiler. You are better off using:

const __int64 LARGE_VALUE = 0x1000000000000000L;
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This is what I resorted to in the end, but I was curious as to whether 64 bit enums are possible, even with a compiler specific extension. – Rob Sep 16 '08 at 21:14
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An enum in C++ can be any integral type. You can, for example, have an enum of chars. IE:

enum MY_ENUM
{
   CHAR_VALUE = 'c',
};

I would assume this includes __int64. Try just

enum MY_ENUM
{
   LARGE_VALUE = 0x1000000000000000,
};

According to my commenter, sixlettervariables, in C the base type will be an int always, while in C++ the base type is whatever is large enough to fit the largest included value. So both enums above should work.

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@Doug T.: while ANSI C dictates that enumerations are the size of the 'int' data type, ISO C++ dictates that enumerations are of the size at least as large as required to represent all values. – sixlettervariables Sep 16 '08 at 20:32
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Since you are working in C++, another alternative might be

const __int64 LARVE_VALUE = ...

This can be specified in an H file.

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If the compiler doesn't support 64 bit enums by compilation flags or any other means I think there is no solution to this one.

You could create something like in your sample something like:

namespace MyNamespace {
const uint64 LARGE_VALUE = 0x1000000000000000;
};

and using it just like an enum using

MyNamespace::LARGE_VALUE

or

using MyNamespace;
....
val = LARGE_VALUE;
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your snipplet of code is not c++ standard:

enum MY_ENUM : unsigned __int64

does not make sense.

use const __int64 instead, as Torlack suggests

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Currently C++ doesn't support this. C++0X will support this, using this syntax:

enum class Enum2 : __int64 {Val1, Val2, val3};
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I was close then. I must of read about the : type syntax somewhere. – Rob Sep 16 '08 at 21:13
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The answers refering to __int64 miss the problem. The enum is valid in C++ compilers that have a true 64 bit integral type. It only fails in compilers which lack such an integral type. Now, C++0x will likely have long long, which will make it work everywhere.

Extensions to C++03 like __int64 work differently across compilers, including its suitability as a base type for enums. That's what you get with non-standard code

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In MSVC++ you can do this:

enum MYLONGLONGENUM:__int64 { BIG_KEY=0x3034303232303330, ... };

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