gcc version 2.95.3 20010315 (release/MontaVista) cross compiler
Guy Streeter
streeter at redhat.com
Thu Dec 18 10:17:33 EST 2003
On Wed, 2003-12-17 at 17:02, David C. Chiu wrote:
> We're experiencing some unexpected behavior with binary generated with
> the said version of gcc; namely that variables declared to char appear
> to be defaulting to unsigned char.
>
> #include <stdio.h>
> #include <stdlib.h>
>
> int main( int argc, char** args, char** envs )
> {
> char sc;
> unsigned char uc;
>
> sc = uc = -3;
>
> printf( "signed char: %d unsigned char: %d\n", sc, uc );
> if ( sc > (char)0 )
> printf( "sc is greater than zero\n" );
> else
> printf( "sc is less or equal to zero\n" );
>
> return 0;
> }
>
> The preceeding code would produce the following unexpected result --
>
> signed char: 253 unsigned char: 253
> sc is greater than zero
>
> Making the following change --
>
> signed char sc;
> unsigned char uc;
> .
> .
>
> Would produce the expected result --
>
> signed char: -3 unsigned char: 253
> sc is less or equal to zero
>
> Can someone shed some light on this? (As in, is this "normal" and we do
> not know only because we've been living under a rock ;-)
This behavior is indeed "normal". For some reason (compatibility with
AIX, I think) the gcc compiler for ppc has always made char unsigned by
default.
Try adding the -fsigned-char option to you gcc command line.
--Guy
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