Signed and unsigned data types in java

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盖世英雄少女心
盖世英雄少女心 2020-12-14 08:54

I have a bit of confusion regarding which unsigned data types does Java support?

I have read this but I don\'t understand its very complicated explanation (to me at

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  • 2020-12-14 09:26

    Java only supports signed types (except char) because it was assumed that one type was simpler for beginners to understand than having two types for each size. In C it was perceived to be a source of error so support for unsigned types was not included.

    So the designers picked four sizes

    • byte, 8 bit
    • short, 16 bit
    • int, 32 bit
    • long, 64 bit.

    and to keep things consistent they were all signed just like float and double However a signed byte is rarely very useful and given they allowed unsigned 16-bit char having an unsigned byte might have made more sense.

    Where this doesn't work so well is when you have to interact with systems which use unsigned integer types. This can be source of confusion and to which type to use instead because often it doesn't make any difference. Java 8 will have operations to support unsigned types as well. These are added to the wrapper classes like Integer and Long

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  • 2020-12-14 09:26

    All Java numeric types are signed. This was the designers decision. Some people think it was a bad idea to have signed byte. J.Bloch in an interview said "I'm going to say that the strangest thing about the Java platform is that the byte type is signed." http://www.theserverside.com/news/thread.tss?thread_id=51624

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