// C integer constants // Source: https://en.cppreference.com/w/c/language/integer_constant #include #include 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 a 64-bit type (unsigned long long or possibly unsigned long) // even without a long suffix printf("12345678901234567890u = %"PRIu64"\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", -9223372036854775808ull ); // unary minus applied to unsigned value subtracts it from 2^64, // this gives unsigned 9223372036854775808 printf("%lld\n", -9223372036854775807ll - 1); // correct way to form signed value -9223372036854775808 } // The following variables are initialized to the same value: int d = 42; int o = 052; int x = 0x2a; int X = 0X2A; int b = 0b101010; // C23 // The following variables are also initialized to the same value: unsigned long long l1 = 18446744073709550592ull; // C99 unsigned long long l2 = 18'446'744'073'709'550'592llu; // C23 unsigned long long l3 = 1844'6744'0737'0955'0592uLL; // C23 unsigned long long l4 = 184467'440737'0'95505'92LLU; // C23