This question & answer C - Define type that is always 32 bit was first asked in a very broad way.
So the classic answer was "use stdint.h
", and it's an obvious duplicate. Someone answered and got 7 (!) upvotes for this before (and after it was closed).
Now OP edited the question, and asks the same thing but without using any includes:
Many people suggest solution:
#include <stdint.h> int32_t my_32bit_int;
as it was already the answer to similar question. However this is not the answer - what is "int32_t" how can we guarantee that it is 32 bit wide? What I try to acomplish is to define such 32 bit type using plain C keyword with no dependecy on other libraries etc.
Now I can't figure out what to do:
- leave closed: but the question is not a duplicate anymore, OP edited it, adding new constraints, changing the question.
- rollback the question edit and leave closed: logical, but not very nice & OP will probably rollback again
- reopen: okay, but there's a highly upvoted answer which will send a wrong message to future readers & answerers
- downvote the answer like hell and delete it: logical, but does answerer deserve that? I don't think so
- edit the answer so it answers: not possible without changing it completely (and frankly I don't have a clue about what to answer :))
- delete the whole thing: and let OP ask a clearer question. The answer wouldn't get in the way of new answers. Not very nice
- something else? flag it for mods? but how to explain?
(Title lifted from What should happen with this mess?, just because I dig it, but a different case.)
stdint.h
exists is there is no standard way to do it. In fact,stdint.h
is the standard way. Using some homebrew crap is bad enough. Worse if others are bothered with that. Folks should just write clean and understandable code. Any C programmer not knowingint32_t
et al. is not a C progammer. In reverse: every C programmer understands this and the implications (2's complement, no padding-bits, etc)