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A number of compilers provide 128-bit integer types, but none of the ones I've used provide the typedefs int128_t. Why?

As far as I recall, the standard

  • Reserves int128_t for this purpose
  • Encourages implementations that provide such a type to provide the typedef
  • Mandates that such implementations provide an intmax_t of at least 128 bits

(and, I do not believe I've used an implementation that actually conforms to that last point)

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I'll refer to the C standard; I think the C++ standard inherits the rules for <stdint.h> / <cstdint> from C.

I know that gcc implements 128-bit signed and unsigned integers, with the names __int128 and unsigned __int128 (__int128 is an implementation-defined keyword) on some platforms.

Even for an implementation that provides a standard 128-bit type, the standard does not require int128_t or uint128_t to be defined. Quoting section 7.20.1.1 of the N1570 draft of the C standard:

These types are optional. However, if an implementation provides integer types with widths of 8, 16, 32, or 64 bits, no padding bits, and (for the signed types) that have a two’s complement representation, it shall define the corresponding typedef names.

C permits implementations to defined extended integer types whose names are implementation-defined keywords. gcc's __int128 and unsigned __int128 are very similar to extended integer types as defined by the standard -- but gcc doesn't treat them that way. Instead, it treats them as a language extension.

In particular, if __int128 and unsigned __int128 were extended integer types, then gcc would be required to define intmax_t and uintmax_t as those types (or as some types at least 128 bits wide). It does not do so; instead, intmax_t and uintmax_t are only 64 bits.

This is, in my opinion, unfortunate, but I don't believe it makes gcc non-conforming. No portable program can depend on the existence of __int128, or on any integer type wider than 64 bits.


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