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What does signed mean in C? I have this table to show:

enter image description here

This says signed char 128 to +127. 128 is also a positive integer, so how can this be something like +128 to +127? Or do 128 and +127 have different meanings? I am referring to the book Apress Beginning C.

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  • 4
    The table is just missing minus signs. There should be a minus sign before the first number in each range of values. Nov 25, 2012 at 17:53
  • 1
    Thanks everyone, +1 to everybody here, I was sure there was something wrong with the book Nov 25, 2012 at 17:56

10 Answers 10

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A signed integer can represent negative numbers; unsigned cannot.

Signed integers have undefined behavior if they overflow, while unsigned integers wrap around using modulo.

Note that that table is incorrect. First off, it's missing the - signs (such as -128 to +127). Second, the standard does not guarantee that those types must fall within those ranges.

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By default, numerical values in C are signed, which means they can be both negative and positive. Unsigned values on the other hand, don't allow negative numbers.

Because it's all just about memory, in the end all the numerical values are stored in binary. A 32 bit unsigned integer can contain values from all binary 0s to all binary 1s. When it comes to 32 bit signed integer, it means one of its bits (most significant) is a flag, which marks the value to be positive or negative. So, it's the interpretation issue, which tells that value is signed.

Positive signed values are stored the same way as unsigned values, but negative numbers are stored using two's complement method.

If you want to write negative value in binary, first write positive number, next invert all the bits and last add 1. When a negative value in two's complement is added to a positive number of the same magnitude, the result will be 0.

In the example below lets deal with 8-bit numbers, because it'll be simple to inspect:

positive 95: 01011111
negative 95: 10100000 + 1 = 10100001 [positive 161]
          0: 01011111 + 10100001 = 100000000
                                    ^
                                    |_______ as we're dealing with 8bit numbers,
                                             the 8 bits which means results in 0
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The table is missing the minuses. The range of signed char is -128 to +127; likewise for the other types on the table.

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  • That's where I got confused, It's the apress book am referring to Nov 25, 2012 at 17:54
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It was a typo in the book; signed char goes from -128 to 127.

Signed integers are stored using the two's complement representation, in which the first bit is used to indicate the sign.

In C, chars are just 8 bit integers. This means that they can go from -(2^7) to 2^7 - 1. That's because we use the 7 last bits for the number and the first bit for the sign. 0 means positive and 1 means negative (in two's complement representation).

  • The biggest positive 7 bit number is (01111111)b = 2^7 - 1 = 127.
  • The smallest negative 7 bit number is (11111111)b = -128
    (because 11111111 is the two's complement of 10000000 = 2^7 = 128).

Unsigned chars don't have signs so they can use all the 8 bits. Going from (00000000)b = 0 to (11111111)b = 255.

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Signed numbers are those that have either + or - appended with them. E.g +2 and -6 are signed numbers. Signed Numbers can store both positive and negative numbers thats why they have bigger range. i.e -32768 to 32767

Unsigned numbers are simply numbers with no sign with them. they are always positive. and their range is from 0 to 65535.

Hope it helps

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    Signed Numbers can store both positive and negative numbers thats why they have bigger range. i.e -32768 to 32767 No, they do not have a bigger range. They have a different range. That's why your unsigned short goes all the way up to 65535. Nov 25, 2012 at 18:58
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Signed usually means the number has a + or - symbol in front of it. This means that unsigned int, unsigned shorts, etc cannot be negative.

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  • What is an unsigned double/float? Nov 25, 2012 at 18:57
  • Well it's a little more involved than that. For one thing, there is no such thing as an unsigned double/float. Nov 26, 2012 at 10:03
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Nobody mentioned this, but range of int in table is wrong: it is

-2^(31) to 2^(31)-1

i.e.,

-2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647
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A signed integer can have both negative and positive values. While a unsigned integer can only have positive values.

For signed integers using two's complement , which is most commonly used, the range is (depending on the bit width of the integer):

char s -> range -128-127

Where a unsigned char have the range:

unsigned char s -> range 0-255

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First, your table is wrong... negative numbers are missing. Refering to the type char.... you can represent at all 256 possibilities as char has one byte means 2^8. So now you have two alternatives to set ur range. either from -128 to +128 or 0 to 255. The first one is a signed char the second a unsigned char. If you using integers be aware what kind of operation system u are using. 16 bit ,32 bit or 64 bit. Int (16 bit,32 bit,64 bit). char has always just 8 bit value.

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It means that there will likely be a sign ( a symbol) in front of your value (+12345 || -12345 )

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    Mar 14, 2022 at 18:29
  • Like a literal + or -? Normally printing positive numbers does not have a + in front. Mar 17, 2022 at 17:30

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