Is char
signed or unsigned by default on iOS?
(I thought this would\'ve been a well answered question, but oddly google turned up nothing at all useful!
In most cases, char
is unsigned on ARM (for performance reasons) and signed on other platforms.
iOS differs from the normal convention for ARM, and char is signed by default. (In particular this differs from Android, where code compiled in the ndk defaults to unsigned char.)
This can be changed in xcode, there is a 'char' Type is unsigned
option (which defaults to off). If this is changed to "yes", xcode will pass -funsigned-char
to llvm. (Checked on xcode 5.0.2)
The reason why iOS differs is mentioned in iOS ABI Function Call Guide: ARM64 Function Calling Conventions, which says simply:
In iOS, as with other Darwin platforms, both char and wchar_t are signed types.
why didnt you just try it?
char x,y;
x=y=0x7F;
x++;
if(x>y) unsigned else signed...