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What's the largest number it can store?

More importantly, could someone explain why dword can't store a larger number?

2 Answers 2

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It has nothing to do with the base used per se. The largest number a DWORD can store is constrained by the fact that DWORD (at least in typical usage of DWORD, which is a Microsoft typedef) is a 32 bit wide unsigned integer. That means the largest number it can store is 2^32-1.

  • In binary that's 11111111111111111111111111111111.
  • In hex it's 0xFFFFFFFF, as @GregHewgill said.
  • In Decimal that's 4294967295.
  • In octal that's 37777777777.

Those are the same number just using different bases. Binary shows what's truly going on at a machine level. Maximum value of DWORD, which is 32 bits wide, has all 32 bits on.

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Assume that your dword is 32 bits. The largest number that can be stored in 32 bits in binary is all 1s:

11111111111111111111111111111111 

In base 16 (hex), this is

0xFFFFFFFF

You can't store an integer any larger than this because then you would need 33 bits.

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