These macros define the sizes and other characteristics of the standard basic data types used in programs being compiled. Unlike the macros in the previous section, these apply to specific features of C and related languages, rather than to fundamental aspects of storage layout.
INT_TYPE_SIZE
int on the
target machine. If you don't define this, the default is one word.
MAX_INT_TYPE_SIZE
int on the target
machine. If this is undefined, the default is INT_TYPE_SIZE.
Otherwise, it is the constant value that is the largest value that
INT_TYPE_SIZE can have at run-time. This is used in cpp.
SHORT_TYPE_SIZE
short on the
target machine. If you don't define this, the default is half a word.
(If this would be less than one storage unit, it is rounded up to one
unit.)
LONG_TYPE_SIZE
long on the
target machine. If you don't define this, the default is one word.
MAX_LONG_TYPE_SIZE
long on the
target machine. If this is undefined, the default is
LONG_TYPE_SIZE. Otherwise, it is the constant value that is the
largest value that LONG_TYPE_SIZE can have at run-time. This is
used in cpp.
LONG_LONG_TYPE_SIZE
long long on the
target machine. If you don't define this, the default is two
words. If you want to support GNU Ada on your machine, the value of
macro must be at least 64.
CHAR_TYPE_SIZE
char on the
target machine. If you don't define this, the default is one quarter
of a word. (If this would be less than one storage unit, it is rounded up
to one unit.)
MAX_CHAR_TYPE_SIZE
char on the
target machine. If this is undefined, the default is
CHAR_TYPE_SIZE. Otherwise, it is the constant value that is the
largest value that CHAR_TYPE_SIZE can have at run-time. This is
used in cpp.
FLOAT_TYPE_SIZE
float on the
target machine. If you don't define this, the default is one word.
DOUBLE_TYPE_SIZE
double on the
target machine. If you don't define this, the default is two
words.
LONG_DOUBLE_TYPE_SIZE
long double on
the target machine. If you don't define this, the default is two
words.
DEFAULT_SIGNED_CHAR
char should be signed or unsigned by default. The user can
always override this default with the options `-fsigned-char'
and `-funsigned-char'.
DEFAULT_SHORT_ENUMS
enum type
only as many bytes as it takes to represent the range of possible values
of that type. A nonzero value means to do that; a zero value means all
enum types should be allocated like int.
If you don't define the macro, the default is 0.
SIZE_TYPE
size_t is defined using the
contents of the string.
The string can contain more than one keyword. If so, separate them with
spaces, and write first any length keyword, then unsigned if
appropriate, and finally int. The string must exactly match one
of the data type names defined in the function
init_decl_processing in the file `c-decl.c'. You may not
omit int or change the order--that would cause the compiler to
crash on startup.
If you don't define this macro, the default is "long unsigned
int".
PTRDIFF_TYPE
ptrdiff_t is defined using the contents of the string. See
SIZE_TYPE above for more information.
If you don't define this macro, the default is "long int".
WCHAR_TYPE
wchar_t is defined using
the contents of the string. See SIZE_TYPE above for more
information.
If you don't define this macro, the default is "int".
WCHAR_TYPE_SIZE
cpp, which cannot make use of
WCHAR_TYPE.
MAX_WCHAR_TYPE_SIZE
WCHAR_TYPE_SIZE. Otherwise, it is the constant value that is the
largest value that WCHAR_TYPE_SIZE can have at run-time. This is
used in cpp.
OBJC_INT_SELECTORS
int.
If this macro is not defined, then selectors should have the type
struct objc_selector *.
OBJC_SELECTORS_WITHOUT_LABELS
TARGET_BELL
TARGET_BS
TARGET_TAB
TARGET_NEWLINE
TARGET_VT
TARGET_FF
TARGET_CR