Declares a member with explicit width, in bits. Adjacent bit-field members may be packed to share and straddle the individual bytes.
A bit-field declaration is a struct or union member declaration which uses the following declarator:
identifier (optional):
width identifier - a name of the bit-field that is being declared. The name is optional: nameless bit-fields introduce the specified number of bits of padding width - an integer constant expression with a value greater or equal to zero and less or equal the number of bits in the underlying type. When greater than zero, this is the number of bits that this bit-field will occupy. The value zero is only allowed for nameless bit-fields and has special meaning: it specifies that the next bit-field in the class definition will begin at an allocation unit's boundary. [edit] Explanation
Bit-fields can have only one of the following (possibly const or volatile qualified) types:
[
â0â,
7]
)[
-4,
3]
)[
â0â,
7]
or [
-4,
3]
.[
â0â,
1]
and implicit conversions to and from it follow the boolean conversion rules.[
-8,
7]
and unsigned _BitInt(5) : 4; has the range [
â0â,
15]
).Additional implementation-defined types may be acceptable. It is also implementation-defined whether a bit-field may have atomic type.(since C11) The number of bits in a bit-field (width) sets the limit to the range of values it can hold:
#include <stdio.h> struct S { // three-bit unsigned field, // allowed values are 0...7 unsigned int b : 3; }; int main(void) { struct S s = {7}; ++s.b; // unsigned overflow printf("%d\n", s.b); // output: 0 }
Multiple adjacent bit-fields are permitted to be (and usually are) packed together:
#include <stdio.h> struct S { // will usually occupy 4 bytes: // 5 bits: value of b1 // 11 bits: unused // 6 bits: value of b2 // 2 bits: value of b3 // 8 bits: unused unsigned b1 : 5, : 11, b2 : 6, b3 : 2; }; int main(void) { printf("%zu\n", sizeof(struct S)); // usually prints 4 }
The special unnamed bit-field of width zero breaks up padding: it specifies that the next bit-field begins at the beginning of the next allocation unit:
#include <stdio.h> struct S { // will usually occupy 8 bytes: // 5 bits: value of b1 // 27 bits: unused // 6 bits: value of b2 // 15 bits: value of b3 // 11 bits: unused unsigned b1 : 5; unsigned : 0; // starts a new unsigned int unsigned b2 : 6; unsigned b3 : 15; }; int main(void) { printf("%zu\n", sizeof(struct S)); // usually prints 8 }
Because bit-fields do not necessarily begin at the beginning of a byte, address of a bit-field cannot be taken. Pointers to bit-fields are not possible. Bit-fields cannot be used with sizeof
and _Alignas
(since C11)(until C23)alignas
(since C23)(since C11).
The following usages of bit-fields causes undefined behavior:
The following properties of bit-fields are unspecified:
The following properties of bit-fields are implementation-defined:
Even though the number of bits in the object representation of _Bool is at least CHAR_BIT, the width of the bit-field of type _Bool cannot be greater than 1.
(since C99)In the C++ programming language, the width of a bit-field can exceed the width of the underlying type (but the extra bits are padding bits), and bit-fields of type int are always signed.
[edit] ReferencesRetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4