Why is Int32's maximum value 0x7FFFFFFF?

情到浓时终转凉″ 提交于 2019-12-03 01:20:40

It's because it's a signed integer. An unsigned 32-bit integer give you the value you expect.

Check out this MSDN page - http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/exx3b86w(v=vs.80).aspx

For a more in depth explanation on why this is check out the link in Jackson Popes answer related to Two's Complement number representation.

Also some further reading.

Jackson Pope

Because one bit is used to store the sign (Int32 can be less than zero).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two%27s_complement

marcnc27

Int32 and Int64 are both signed so they can handle integer values from -capacity/2 to (capacity/2)-1 (for zero) that is why the max value isn't the one you expected. But you can get what you want by using an unsigned int to have only positive numbers.

The first bit is the sign - an int32 is signed, i.e. it can be positive/negative (well I probably shouldn't say 'first' bit!)

You are not considering the negative numbers. Int32 have the sign.

From MSDN: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.int32.minvalue.aspx The MinValue is -2,147,483,648; that is, hexadecimal 0x80000000.

In a 2's complement signed n-bit type, the range is from -2n-1 to 2n-1-1 because with n bits you can represent 2n different values, half of which is used for signed numbers because of the sign bit. The remaining 2n-1 half is used for non-negative number. Since one is used for 0, there are only 2n-1-1 remaining values for positive numbers

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