Sizes, alignments, and maxima (was: Contiguous Arrays)
Karl Heuer
karl at haddock.ima.isc.com
Thu Feb 23 08:51:06 AEST 1989
In article <830 at atanasoff.cs.iastate.edu> hascall at atanasoff.cs.iastate.edu (John Hascall) writes:
>In article <8943 at alice.UUCP> ark at alice.UUCP (Andrew Koenig) writes:
>>For that reason it's hard to see how a C implementation could possibly
>>do anything but put [an array] in contiguous memory.
>
>How about: Assume int's are (say) 2 bytes. Assume further that ... all
>accesses must be on an 8-byte boundary.
Then sizeof(int) is 8, and the elements of the array consists of contiguous
8-byte units, of which only two bytes are significant. This sounds much like
a Cray-2, in fact.
Question for comp.std.c (to which I've redirected followups): I've been told
that the Cray-2 has sizeof(int) == 8, yet INT_MAX == 0x7FFFFFFF (i.e. the
arithmetic is only accurate to 4 bytes when using int). Is this legal in a
conforming implementation? I think I can prove that UINT_MAX must be 2*^64-1,
but I'm less sure about INT_MAX. Section 3.1.2.5 has a restriction to binary
architectures, which by the definition in the footnote seems to require every
bit except the highest to represent a power of two; should this be interpreted
as a requirement that 2*^63-1 must be representable in an 8-byte int?
Karl W. Z. Heuer (ima!haddock!karl or karl at haddock.isc.com), The Walking Lint
(I've implicitly assumed 8-bit bytes above, simply because it would be too
cumbersome to type the more correct expressions involving CHAR_BIT.)
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