C data types tutorial example explained #C #data #types char a = 'C'; // single character %c char b[] = "Bro"; // array of characters %s float c = 3.141592; // 4 bytes (32 bits of precision) 6 - 7 digits %f double d = 3.141592653589793; // 8 bytes (64 bits of precision) 15 - 16 digits %lf bool e = true; // 1 byte (true or false) %d char f = 120; // 1 byte (-128 to +127) %d or %c unsigned char g = 255; // 1 byte (0 to +255) %d or %c short h = 32767; // 2 bytes (−32,768 to +32,767) %d unsigned short i = 65535; // 2 bytes (0 to +65,535) %d int j = 2147483647; // 4 bytes (-2,147,483,648 to +2,147,483,647) %d unsigned int k = 4294967295; // 4 bytes (0 to +4,294,967,295) %u long long int l = 9223372036854775807; // 8 bytes (-9 quintillion to +9 quintillion) %lld unsigned long long int m = 18446744073709551615U; // 8 bytes (0 to +18 quintillion) %llu printf("%c\n", a); // char printf("%s\n", b); // character array printf("%f\n", c); // float printf("%lf\n", d); // double printf("%d\n", e); // bool printf("%d\n", f); // char as numeric value printf("%d\n", g); // unsigned char as numeric value printf("%d\n", h); // short printf("%d\n", i); // unsigned short printf("%d\n", j); // int printf("%u\n", k); // unsigned int printf("%lld\n", l); // long long int printf("%llu\n", m); // unsigned long long int