ISO C99 and ISO C++11 support data types for integers that are at least 64 bits wide, and as an extension GCC supports them in C90 and C++98 modes. Simply write long long int
for a signed integer, or unsigned long long int
for an unsigned integer. To make an integer constant of type long long int
, add the suffix ‘LL’ to the integer. To make an integer constant of type unsigned long
long int
, add the suffix ‘ULL’ to the integer.
You can use these types in arithmetic like any other integer types. Addition, subtraction, and bitwise boolean operations on these types are open-coded on all types of machines. Multiplication is open-coded if the machine supports a fullword-to-doubleword widening multiply instruction. Division and shifts are open-coded only on machines that provide special support. The operations that are not open-coded use special library routines that come with GCC.
There may be pitfalls when you use long long
types for function arguments without function prototypes. If a function expects type int
for its argument, and you pass a value of type long long int
, confusion results because the caller and the subroutine disagree about the number of bytes for the argument. Likewise, if the function expects long long int
and you pass int
. The best way to avoid such problems is to use prototypes.
© Free Software Foundation
Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3.
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-10.2.0/gcc/Long-Long.html