- C Programming Tutorial
- C - Home
- Basics of C
- C - Overview
- C - Features
- C - History
- C - Environment Setup
- C - Program Structure
- C - Hello World
- C - Compilation Process
- C - Comments
- C - Tokens
- C - Keywords
- C - Identifiers
- C - User Input
- C - Basic Syntax
- C - Data Types
- C - Variables
- C - Integer Promotions
- C - Type Conversion
- C - Type Casting
- C - Booleans
- Constants and Literals in C
- C - Constants
- C - Literals
- C - Escape sequences
- C - Format Specifiers
- Operators in C
- C - Operators
- C - Arithmetic Operators
- C - Relational Operators
- C - Logical Operators
- C - Bitwise Operators
- C - Assignment Operators
- C - Unary Operators
- C - Increment and Decrement Operators
- C - Ternary Operator
- C - sizeof Operator
- C - Operator Precedence
- C - Misc Operators
- Decision Making in C
- C - Decision Making
- C - if statement
- C - if...else statement
- C - nested if statements
- C - switch statement
- C - nested switch statements
- Loops in C
- C - Loops
- C - While loop
- C - For loop
- C - Do...while loop
- C - Nested loop
- C - Infinite loop
- C - Break Statement
- C - Continue Statement
- C - goto Statement
- Functions in C
- C - Functions
- C - Main Function
- C - Function call by Value
- C - Function call by reference
- C - Nested Functions
- C - Variadic Functions
- C - User-Defined Functions
- C - Callback Function
- C - Return Statement
- C - Recursion
- Scope Rules in C
- C - Scope Rules
- C - Static Variables
- C - Global Variables
- Arrays in C
- C - Arrays
- C - Properties of Array
- C - Multi-Dimensional Arrays
- C - Passing Arrays to Function
- C - Return Array from Function
- C - Variable Length Arrays
- Pointers in C
- C - Pointers
- C - Pointers and Arrays
- C - Applications of Pointers
- C - Pointer Arithmetics
- C - Array of Pointers
- C - Pointer to Pointer
- C - Passing Pointers to Functions
- C - Return Pointer from Functions
- C - Function Pointers
- C - Pointer to an Array
- C - Pointers to Structures
- C - Chain of Pointers
- C - Pointer vs Array
- C - Character Pointers and Functions
- C - NULL Pointer
- C - void Pointer
- C - Dangling Pointers
- C - Dereference Pointer
- C - Near, Far and Huge Pointers
- C - Initialization of Pointer Arrays
- C - Pointers vs. Multi-dimensional Arrays
- Strings in C
- C - Strings
- C - Array of Strings
- C - Special Characters
- C Structures and Unions
- C - Structures
- C - Structures and Functions
- C - Arrays of Structures
- C - Self-Referential Structures
- C - Lookup Tables
- C - Dot (.) Operator
- C - Enumeration (or enum)
- C - Structure Padding and Packing
- C - Nested Structures
- C - Anonymous Structure and Union
- C - Unions
- C - Bit Fields
- C - Typedef
- File Handling in C
- C - Input & Output
- C - File I/O (File Handling)
- C Preprocessors
- C - Preprocessors
- C - Pragmas
- C - Preprocessor Operators
- C - Macros
- C - Header Files
- Memory Management in C
- C - Memory Management
- C - Memory Address
- C - Storage Classes
- Miscellaneous Topics
- C - Error Handling
- C - Variable Arguments
- C - Command Execution
- C - Math Functions
- C - Static Keyword
- C - Random Number Generation
- C - Command Line Arguments
- C Programming Resources
- C - Questions & Answers
- C - Quick Guide
- C - Cheat Sheet
- C - Useful Resources
- C - Discussion
C - Data Types
Data types in C refer to an extensive system used for declaring variables or functions of different types. The type of a variable determines how much space it occupies in storage and how the bit pattern stored is interpreted. In this chapter, we will learn about data types in C. A related concept is that of "variables", which refer to the addressable location in the memory of the processor. The data captured via different input devices is stored in the computer memory. A symbolic name can be assigned to the storage location called variable name.
C is a statically typed language. The name of the variable along with the type of data it intends to store must be explicitly declared before actually using it.
C is also a strongly typed language, which means that the automatic or implicit conversion of one data type to another is not allowed.
The types in C can be classified as follows −
Sr.No. | Types & Description |
---|---|
1 | Basic Types They are arithmetic types and are further classified into: (a) integer types and (b) floating-point types. |
2 | Enumerated types They are again arithmetic types and they are used to define variables that can only assign certain discrete integer values throughout the program. |
3 | The type void The type specifier void indicates that no value is available. |
4 | Derived types They include (a) Pointer types, (b) Array types, (c) Structure types, (d) Union types and (e) Function types. |
The array types and structure types are referred collectively as the aggregate types. The type of a function specifies the type of the function's return value. We will see the basic types in the following section, where as other types will be covered in the upcoming chapters.
Integer Data Types in C
The following table provides the details of standard integer types with their storage sizes and value ranges −
Type | Storage size | Value range |
---|---|---|
char | 1 byte | -128 to 127 or 0 to 255 |
unsigned char | 1 byte | 0 to 255 |
signed char | 1 byte | -128 to 127 |
int | 2 or 4 bytes | -32,768 to 32,767 or -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647 |
unsigned int | 2 or 4 bytes | 0 to 65,535 or 0 to 4,294,967,295 |
short | 2 bytes | -32,768 to 32,767 |
unsigned short | 2 bytes | 0 to 65,535 |
long | 8 bytes | -9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807 |
unsigned long | 8 bytes | 0 to 18446744073709551615 |
To get the exact size of a type or a variable on a particular platform, you can use the sizeof operator. The expressions sizeof(type) yields the storage size of the object or type in bytes.
Example of Integer Data Types
Given below is an example to get the size of various type on a machine using different constant defined in limits.h header file −
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <limits.h> #include <float.h> int main(int argc, char** argv) { printf("CHAR_BIT : %d\n", CHAR_BIT); printf("CHAR_MAX : %d\n", CHAR_MAX); printf("CHAR_MIN : %d\n", CHAR_MIN); printf("INT_MAX : %d\n", INT_MAX); printf("INT_MIN : %d\n", INT_MIN); printf("LONG_MAX : %ld\n", (long) LONG_MAX); printf("LONG_MIN : %ld\n", (long) LONG_MIN); printf("SCHAR_MAX : %d\n", SCHAR_MAX); printf("SCHAR_MIN : %d\n", SCHAR_MIN); printf("SHRT_MAX : %d\n", SHRT_MAX); printf("SHRT_MIN : %d\n", SHRT_MIN); printf("UCHAR_MAX : %d\n", UCHAR_MAX); printf("UINT_MAX : %u\n", (unsigned int) UINT_MAX); printf("ULONG_MAX : %lu\n", (unsigned long) ULONG_MAX); printf("USHRT_MAX : %d\n", (unsigned short) USHRT_MAX); return 0; }
Output
When you compile and execute the above program, it produces the following result on Linux−
CHAR_BIT : 8 CHAR_MAX : 127 CHAR_MIN : -128 INT_MAX : 2147483647 INT_MIN : -2147483648 LONG_MAX : 9223372036854775807 LONG_MIN : -9223372036854775808 SCHAR_MAX : 127 SCHAR_MIN : -128 SHRT_MAX : 32767 SHRT_MIN : -32768 UCHAR_MAX : 255 UINT_MAX : 4294967295 ULONG_MAX : 18446744073709551615 USHRT_MAX : 65535
Floating-Point Data Types in C
The following table provides the details of standard floating-point types with storage sizes and value ranges and their precision −
Type | Storage size | Value range | Precision |
---|---|---|---|
float | 4 byte | 1.2E-38 to 3.4E+38 | 6 decimal places |
double | 8 byte | 2.3E-308 to 1.7E+308 | 15 decimal places |
long double | 10 byte | 3.4E-4932 to 1.1E+4932 | 19 decimal places |
The header file "float.h" defines the macros that allow you to use these values and other details about the binary representation of real numbers in your programs.
Example Floating-Point Data Types
The following example prints the storage space taken by a float type and its range values −
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <limits.h> #include <float.h> int main(int argc, char** argv) { printf("Storage size for float : %zu \n", sizeof(float)); printf("FLT_MAX : %g\n", (float) FLT_MAX); printf("FLT_MIN : %g\n", (float) FLT_MIN); printf("-FLT_MAX : %g\n", (float) -FLT_MAX); printf("-FLT_MIN : %g\n", (float) -FLT_MIN); printf("DBL_MAX : %g\n", (double) DBL_MAX); printf("DBL_MIN : %g\n", (double) DBL_MIN); printf("-DBL_MAX : %g\n", (double) -DBL_MAX); printf("Precision value: %d\n", FLT_DIG ); return 0; }
Output
When you compile and execute the above program, it produces the following result on Linux −
Storage size for float : 4 FLT_MAX : 3.40282e+38 FLT_MIN : 1.17549e-38 -FLT_MAX : -3.40282e+38 -FLT_MIN : -1.17549e-38 DBL_MAX : 1.79769e+308 DBL_MIN : 2.22507e-308 -DBL_MAX : -1.79769e+308 Precision value: 6
Note: "sizeof" returns "size_t". The type of unsigned integer of "size_t" can vary depending on platform. And, it may not be long unsigned int everywhere. In such cases, we use "%zu" for the format string instead of "%d".
Earlier versions of C did not have Boolean data type. C99 standardization of ANSI C introduced _bool type which treats zero value as false and non-zero as true.
User-defined Data Types in C
There are two user-defined data types struct and union, that can be defined by the user with the help of the combination of other basic data types.
Struct Data Type
One of the unique features of C language is to store values of different data types in one variable. The keywords struct and union are provided to derive a user-defined data type. For example,
struct student { char name[20]; int marks, age; };
Union Data Type
A union is a special case of struct where the size of union variable is not the sum of sizes of individual elements, as in struct, but it corresponds to the largest size among individual elements. Hence, only one of elements can be used at a time. Look at following example:
union ab { int a; float b; };
We shall learn more about structure and union types in a later chapter.
The void Data Type in C
The void type specifies that no value is available. It is used in three kinds of situations −
Sr.No | Types & Description |
---|---|
1 |
Function returns as void There are various functions in C that do not return any value or you can say they return void. A function with no return value has the return type as void. For example, void exit (int status); |
2 |
Function arguments as void There are various functions in C which do not accept any parameter. A function with no parameter can accept a void. For example, int rand(void); |
3 |
Pointers to void A pointer of type void * represents the address of an object, but not its type. For example, a memory allocation function void *malloc( size_t size ); returns a pointer to void which can be casted to any data type. |
Arrays Data Type in C
An array is a collection of multiple values of same data type stored in consecutive memory locations. The size of array is mentioned in square brackets []. For example,
int marks[5];
Arrays can be initialized at the time of declaration. The values to be assigned are put in parentheses.
int marks[ ]={50,56,76,67,43};
C also supports multi-dimensional arrays. To learn more about arrays, refer to the chapter on Arrays in C.
Pointers Data Type in C
A pointer is a special variable that stores address or reference of another variable/object in the memory. The name of pointer variable is prefixed by asterisk (*). The type of the pointer variable and the variable/object to be pointed must be same.
int x; int *y; y = &x;
Here, "y" is a pointer variable that stores the address of variable "x" which is of "int" type.
Pointers are used for many different purposes. Text string manipulation and dynamic memory allocation are some of the processes where the use of pointers is mandatory. Later in this tutorial, you can find a detailed chapter on Pointers in C.