Range of Type (The GNU C Library) (original) (raw)


A.5.2 Range of an Integer Type

Suppose you need to store an integer value which can range from zero to one million. Which is the smallest type you can use? There is no general rule; it depends on the C compiler and target machine. You can use the ‘MIN’ and ‘MAX’ macros in limits.h to determine which type will work.

Each signed integer type has a pair of macros which give the smallest and largest values that it can hold. Each unsigned integer type has one such macro, for the maximum value; the minimum value is, of course, zero.

The values of these macros are all integer constant expressions. The ‘MAX’ and ‘MIN’ macros for char and short int types have values of type int. The ‘MAX’ and ‘MIN’ macros for the other types have values of the same type described by the macro—thus, ULONG_MAX has typeunsigned long int.

SCHAR_MIN

This is the minimum value that can be represented by a signed char.

SCHAR_MAX

UCHAR_MAX

These are the maximum values that can be represented by asigned char and unsigned char, respectively.

CHAR_MIN

This is the minimum value that can be represented by a char. It’s equal to SCHAR_MIN if char is signed, or zero otherwise.

CHAR_MAX

This is the maximum value that can be represented by a char. It’s equal to SCHAR_MAX if char is signed, orUCHAR_MAX otherwise.

SHRT_MIN

This is the minimum value that can be represented by a signed short int. On most machines that the GNU C Library runs on,short integers are 16-bit quantities.

SHRT_MAX

USHRT_MAX

These are the maximum values that can be represented by asigned short int and unsigned short int, respectively.

INT_MIN

This is the minimum value that can be represented by a signed int. On most machines that the GNU C Library runs on, an int is a 32-bit quantity.

INT_MAX

UINT_MAX

These are the maximum values that can be represented by, respectively, the type signed int and the type unsigned int.

LONG_MIN

This is the minimum value that can be represented by a signed long int. On most machines that the GNU C Library runs on, longintegers are 32-bit quantities, the same size as int.

LONG_MAX

ULONG_MAX

These are the maximum values that can be represented by asigned long int and unsigned long int, respectively.

LLONG_MIN

This is the minimum value that can be represented by a signed long long int. On most machines that the GNU C Library runs on,long long integers are 64-bit quantities.

LLONG_MAX

ULLONG_MAX

These are the maximum values that can be represented by a signed long long int and unsigned long long int, respectively.

LONG_LONG_MIN

LONG_LONG_MAX

ULONG_LONG_MAX

These are obsolete names for LLONG_MIN, LLONG_MAX, andULLONG_MAX. They are only available if _GNU_SOURCE is defined (see Feature Test Macros). In GCC versions prior to 3.0, these were the only names available.

WCHAR_MAX

This is the maximum value that can be represented by a wchar_t. See Introduction to Extended Characters.

The header file limits.h also defines some additional constants that parameterize various operating system and file system limits. These constants are described in System Configuration Parameters.