who can help explain the program result:
int main()
{
char a=1;
short b=1;
printf("%d\n", sizeof((b==a)?a:b));
printf("%d %d", sizeof(a), sizeof(b));
return 0;
}
print out is
4
1 2
From C Standard#6.5.3.4p2 [emphasis mine]
2 The sizeof operator yields the size (in bytes) of its operand, which may be an expression or the parenthesized name of a type. The size is determined from the type of the operand. The result is an integer. If the type of the operand is a variable length array type, the operand is evaluated; otherwise, the operand is not evaluated and the result is an integer constant.
In the expression:
sizeof((b==a)?a:b)
the char
and short
will be converted to int
due to default type promotion1) and the whole expression evaluated to int
type. Hence, you are getting the output as 4
.
Also, the type of the result of sizeof
operator is size_t
. You should use %zu
format specifier instead of %d
.
When an integer value whose type has rank lower than that of int
(such as char
or short
) is used in an expression, it is automatically promoted to type int
.
In the case of the expression (b==a)?a:b
, both possible values are promoted to type int
, so the expression as a whole has type int
. Therefore the sizeof
operator is evaluating to the size of an int
, which on your machine is 4.
Note also that the expression passed to sizeof
is not evaluated at runtime. It is only parsed by the compiler to determine its type. The only time the operand of sizeof
is evaluated at runtime is if the operand is a variable length array.
a
is being cast to an integer because of the%d
formatting mask in your call toprintf
. Print it as a character, and maybe this won't happen.(b==a)?a:b)
are determined beforesizeof
and all that is determined before theprintf()
call and the application of"%d"
.