Allows values of integer type to be used in expressions directly.
Syntax
An integer constant is a non-lvalue expression of the form.
decimal-constant integer-suffix(optional) | (1) | |
octal-constant integer-suffix(optional) | (2) | |
hex-constant integer-suffix(optional) | (3) |
where.
- decimal-constant is a non-zero decimal digit (
1
,2
,3
,4
,5
,6
,7
,8
,9
), followed by zero or more decimal digits (0
,1
,2
,3
,4
,5
,6
,7
,8
,9
) - octal-constant is the digit zero (
0
) followed by zero or more octal digits (0
,1
,2
,3
,4
,5
,6
,7
) - hex-constant is the character sequence
0x
or the character sequence0X
followed by one or more hexadecimal digits (0
,1
,2
,3
,4
,5
,6
,7
,8
,9
,a
,A
,b
,B
,c
,C
,d
,D
,e
,E
,f
,F
) - integer-suffix, if provided, may contain one or both of the following (if both are provided, they may appear in any order:
- unsigned-suffix (the character
u
or the characterU
) - long-suffix (the character
l
or the characterL
) or the long-long-suffix (the character sequencell
or the character sequenceLL
) (since C99)
- unsigned-suffix (the character
Explanation
The following variables are initialized to the same value:
int d = 42; int o = 052; int x = 0x2a; int X = 0X2A;
The type of the integer constant
The type of the integer constant is the first type in which the value can fit, from the list of types which depends on which numeric base and which integer-suffix was used.
Types allowed for integer constants | ||
---|---|---|
suffix | decimal bases | hexadecimal or octal bases |
no suffix | int
| int
|
u or U | unsigned int
| unsigned int
|
l or L | long int
| long int
|
both l /L and u /U | unsigned long int
| unsigned long int
|
ll or LL | long long int (since C99) | long long int (since C99)
|
both ll /LL and u /U | unsigned long long int (since C99) | unsigned long long int (since C99) |
If the value of the integer constant is too big to fit in any of the types allowed by suffix/base combination and the compiler supports extended integer types (such as __int128
), the constant may be given the extended integer type; otherwise, the program is ill-formed.
Notes
Letters in the integer constants are case-insensitive: 0xDeAdBaBeU
and 0XdeadBABEu
represent the same number (one exception is the long-long-suffix, which is either ll
or LL
, never lL
or Ll
).
There are no negative integer constants. Expressions such as -1
apply the unary minus operator to the value represented by the constant, which may involve implicit type conversions.
When used in a controlling expression of #if or #elif, all signed integer constants act as if they have type intmax_t
and all unsigned integer constants act as if they have type uintmax_t
.
Integer constants may be used in integer constant expressions.
Example
#include <stdio.h> int main(void) { printf("123 = %d\n", 123); printf("0123 = %d\n", 0123); printf("0x123 = %d\n", 0x123); printf("12345678901234567890ull = %llu\n", 12345678901234567890ull); // the type is unsigned long long even without a long long suffix printf("12345678901234567890u = %llu\n", 12345678901234567890u ); // printf("%lld\n", -9223372036854775808); // ERROR // the value 9223372036854775808 cannot fit in signed long long, which is the // biggest type allowed for unsuffixed decimal integer constant printf("%llu\n", -9223372036854775808u ); // unary minus applied to unsigned value subtracts it from 2^64, // this gives 9223372036854775808 printf("%lld\n", -9223372036854775807 - 1); // // correct way to represent the value -9223372036854775808 }
Output:
123 = 123 0123 = 83 0x123 = 291 12345678901234567890ull = 12345678901234567890 12345678901234567890u = 12345678901234567890 9223372036854775808 -9223372036854775808
References
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 6.4.4.1 Integer constants (p: 62-64)
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
- 6.4.4.1 Integer constants (p: 54-56)
- C89/C90 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990):
- 3.1.3.2 Integer constants
See also
C++ documentation for integer literal |
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