I have the following code:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
unsigned int a = -1;
int b = -1;
printf("%x\n", a);
printf("%x\n", b);
printf("%d\n", a);
printf("%d\n", b);
printf("%u\n", a);
printf("%u\n", b);
return 0;
}
The output is:
ffffffff
ffffffff
-1
-1
4294967295
4294967295
I can see that a value is interpreted as signed or unsigned according to the value passed to printf
function. In both cases, the bytes are the same (ffffffff
). Then, what is the unsigned
word for?
Assign a int -1
to an unsigned
: As -1
does not fit in the range [0...UINT_MAX]
, multiples of UINT_MAX+1
are added until the answer is in range. Evidently UINT_MAX
is pow(2,32)-1 or 429496725
on OP's machine so a
has the value of 4294967295.
unsigned int a = -1;
The "%x"
, "%u"
specifier expects a matching unsigned
. Since these do not match, "If a conversion specification is invalid, the behavior is undefined.
If any argument is not the correct type for the corresponding conversion specification, the behavior is undefined." C11 §7.21.6.1 9. The printf specifier does not change b
.
printf("%x\n", b); // UB
printf("%u\n", b); // UB
The "%d"
specifier expects a matching int
. Since these do not match, more UB.
printf("%d\n", a); // UB
Given undefined behavior, the conclusions are not supported.
both cases, the bytes are the same (ffffffff).
Even with the same bit pattern, different types may have different values. ffffffff
as an unsigned
has the value of 4294967295. As an int
, depending signed integer encoding, it has the value of -1, -2147483647 or TBD. As a float
it may be a NAN.
what is unsigned word for?
unsigned
stores a whole number in the range [0 ... UINT_MAX]
. It never has a negative value. If code needs a non-negative number, use unsigned
. If code needs a counting number that may be +, - or 0, use int
.
Update: to avoid a compiler warning about assigning a signed int
to unsigned
, use the below. This is an unsigned
1u
being negated - which is well defined as above. The effect is the same as a -1
, but conveys to the compiler direct intentions.
unsigned int a = -1u;