Welcome to integer promotion. If I may quote from the website:
If an int can represent all values of the original type, the value is
converted to an int; otherwise, it is converted to an unsigned int.
These are called the integer promotions. All other types are unchanged
by the integer promotions.
C can be really confusing when you do comparisons such as these, I recently puzzled some of my non-C programming friends with the following tease:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
int main()
{
char* string = "One looooooooooong string";
printf("%d\n", strlen(string));
if (strlen(string) < -1) printf("This cannot be happening :(");
return 0;
}
Which indeed does print This cannot be happening :(
and seemingly demonstrates that 25 is smaller than -1!
What happens underneath however is that -1 is represented as an unsigned integer which due to the underlying bits representation is equal to 4294967295 on a 32 bit system. And naturally 25 is smaller than 4294967295.
If we however explicitly cast the size_t
type returned by strlen
as a signed integer:
if ((int)(strlen(string)) < -1)
Then it will compare 25 against -1 and all will be well with the world.
A good compiler should warn you about the comparison between an unsigned and signed integer and yet it is still so easy to miss (especially if you don't enable warnings).
This is especially confusing for Java programmers as all primitive types there are signed. Here's what James Gosling (one of the creators of Java) had to say on the subject:
Gosling: For me as a language designer, which I don't really count
myself as these days, what "simple" really ended up meaning was could
I expect J. Random Developer to hold the spec in his head. That
definition says that, for instance, Java isn't -- and in fact a lot of
these languages end up with a lot of corner cases, things that nobody
really understands. Quiz any C developer about unsigned, and pretty
soon you discover that almost no C developers actually understand what
goes on with unsigned, what unsigned arithmetic is. Things like that
made C complex. The language part of Java is, I think, pretty simple.
The libraries you have to look up.