struct node
{
double a : 23;
int b;
}s;
int main()
{
printf("%d\n",sizeof(s));
}
Why do this produce a compile error? I want to know why we cannot do bit-fields with double datatype.
struct node
{
double a : 23;
int b;
}s;
int main()
{
printf("%d\n",sizeof(s));
}
Why do this produce a compile error? I want to know why we cannot do bit-fields with double datatype.
My answer is for C. I have no idea if it applies to C++.
I suggest you do not try to write multi-language source files. It is hard work.
printf
sizeof(s)
and type required by "%d"
do not matchreturn 0;
in main (for C89)What compiler error do you get?
I want to know that we can not do bitwise with double datatype
Because the C99 Standard says so, eg (emphasis is mine)
6.7.2.1/9
A bit-field is interpreted as a signed or unsigned integer type consisting of the specified number of bits.
C provides a special type of structure member known as a bit field, which is an integer with an explicitly specified number of bits.
Non-integral types cannot be used as base types for bit fields.
Quoted from Wiki :
C also provides a special type of structure member known as a bit field, which is an integer with an explicitly specified number of bits. A bit field is declared as a structure member of type int, signed int, unsigned int, or _Bool, following the member name by a colon (:) and the number of bits it should occupy. The total number of bits in a single bit field must not exceed the total number of bits in its declared type.
in the statement double a : 23;
you are using bit field for double which is an error.You should use int instead.
Edit: The Behavior is implementation dependent use anything other than these.Char may work on your system but it may fail on other platform as it's not part of standard.
Yep, You can't apply bit fields for double ,that's why it is giving compilation error. Bit fiels are allowed only for signed & unsigned int ,_bool data type.