I have the following code
int i, a, z;
i = 2343243443;
a = 5464354324324324;
z = i * a;
cout << z << endl;
When these are
You should first try to use 64-bit numbers (long or better, unsigned long if everything is positive). With unsigned long you can operate between 0 and 18446744073709551615, with long between -9223372036854775808 and 9223372036854775807.
If it is not enough, then there is no easy solution, you have to perform your operation at software level using arrays of unsigned long for instance, and overload "<<" operator for display. But this is not that easy, and I guess you are a beginner (no offense) considering the question you asked.
If 64-bit representation is not enough for you, I think you should consider floating-point representation, especially "double". With double, you can represent numbers between about -10^308 and 10^308. You won't be able to have perfectly accurate computatiosn on very large number (the least significant digits won't be computed), but this should be a good-enough option for whatever you want to do here.