This is a very subtle error. What you are seeing is a consequence of there being no negative integer literals in C++. If we look at [lex.icon] we get that a integer-literal,
integer-literal
decimal-literal integer-suffixopt
[...]
can be a decimal-literal,
decimal-literal:
nonzero-digit
decimal-literal ’ opt digit
where digit is [0-9]
and nonzero-digit is [1-9]
and the suffix par can be one of u
, U
, l
, L
, ll
, or LL
. Nowhere in here does it include -
as being part of the decimal literal.
In §2.13.2, we also have:
An integer literal is a sequence of digits that has no period or exponent part, with optional separating single quotes that are ignored when determining its value. An integer literal may have a prefix that specifies its base and a suffix that specifies its type. The lexically first digit of the sequence of digits is the most significant. A decimal integer literal (base ten) begins with a digit other than 0 and consists of a sequence of decimal digits.
(emphasis mine)
Which means the -
in -2147483648
is the unary operator -
. That means -2147483648
is actually treated as -1 * (2147483648)
. Since 2147483648
is one too many for your int
it is promoted to a long int
and the ambiguity comes from that not matching.
If you want to get the minimum or maximum value for a type in a portable manner you can use:
std::numeric_limits<type>::min(); // or max()
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