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Conversions from Unsigned Integral Types

 

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The latest version of this topic can be found at Conversions from Unsigned Integral Types.

An unsigned integer is converted to a shorter unsigned or signed integer by truncating the high-order bits, or to a longer unsigned or signed integer by zero-extending (see the Conversions from Unsigned Integral Types table).

When the value with integral type is demoted to a signed integer with smaller size, or an unsigned integer is converted to its corresponding signed integer, the value is unchanged if it can be represented in the new type. However, the value it represents changes if the sign bit is set, as in the following example.

int j;  
unsigned short k = 65533;  
  
j = k;  
printf_s( "%hd\n", j );   // Prints -3  

If it cannot be represented, the result is implementation-defined. See Type-Cast Conversions for information on the Microsoft C compiler's handling of demotion of integers. The same behavior results from integer conversion or from type casting the integer.

Unsigned values are converted in a way that preserves their value and is not representable directly in C. The only exception is a conversion from unsigned long to float, which loses at most the low-order bits. Otherwise, value is preserved, signed or unsigned. When a value of integral type is converted to floating, and the value is outside the range representable, the result is undefined. (See Storage of Basic Types for information about the range for integral and floating-point types.)

The following table summarizes conversions from unsigned integral types.

Conversions from Unsigned Integral Types

From To Method
unsigned char char Preserve bit pattern; high-order bit becomes sign bit
unsigned char short Zero-extend
unsigned char long Zero-extend
unsigned char unsigned short Zero-extend
unsigned char unsigned long Zero-extend
unsigned char float Convert to long; convert long to float
unsigned char double Convert to long; convert long to double
unsigned char long double Convert to long; convert long to double
unsigned short char Preserve low-order byte
unsigned short short Preserve bit pattern; high-order bit becomes sign bit
unsigned short long Zero-extend
unsigned short unsigned char Preserve low-order byte
unsigned short unsigned long Zero-extend
unsigned short float Convert to long; convert long to float
unsigned short double Convert to long; convert long to double
unsigned short long double Convert to long; convert long to double
unsigned long char Preserve low-order byte
unsigned long short Preserve low-order word
unsigned long long Preserve bit pattern; high-order bit becomes sign bit
unsigned long unsigned char Preserve low-order byte
unsigned long unsigned short Preserve low-order word
unsigned long float Convert to long; convert long to float
unsigned long double Convert directly to double
unsigned long long double Convert to long; convert long to double

Microsoft Specific

For the Microsoft 32-bit C compiler, the unsigned int type is equivalent to the unsigned long type. Conversion of an unsigned int value proceeds in the same way as conversion of an unsigned long. Conversions from unsigned long values to float are not accurate if the value being converted is larger than the maximum positive signed long value.

END Microsoft Specific

See Also

Assignment Conversions