I'm very new to dealing with bits and have got stuck on the following warning when compiling:
7: warning: left shift count >= width of type
My line 7 looks like this
unsigned long int x = 1 << 32; This would make sense if the size of long on my system was 32 bits. However, sizeof(long) returns 8 and CHAR_BIT is defined as 8 suggesting that long should be 8x8 = 64 bits long.
What am I missing here? Are sizeof and CHAR_BIT inaccurate or have I misunderstood something fundamental?
long may be a 64-bit type, but 1 is still an int. You need to make 1 a long int using the L suffix:
unsigned long x = 1UL << 32; (You should also make it unsigned using the U suffix as I've shown, to avoid the issues of left shifting a signed integer. There's no problem when a long is 64 bits wide and you shift by 32 bits, but it would be a problem if you shifted 63 bits)
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