+ 1
Can someone explain this to me? (Casting thingy...)
public class Main { public static void main(String[] args) { int a = 130; byte b = (byte) a; System.out.print(b); } } I already ask this question yesterday but i didn't still understand the answers. First of all i know this will be a "byte overflow" but why does when i cast a "byte" inside my container "b", the output will be -126? How did the compiler arrived -126? I hope someone can explain me to thisetc.
5 Respostas
+ 2
yes:
127 in binary is 01111111
128 in binary is 10000000
129 in binary is 10000001
130 in binary is 10000010
so, for each, if we convert each to signed:
127 = +1111111 (+127)
128 = -0000000 (-0)
129 = -0000001 (-1)
130 = -0000010 (-2)
2-complement of each (invert all bits and add 1):
1111111 => + sign, no complement (127)
0000000 => 1111111 + 1 = 10000000 = 128
0000001 => 1111110 + 1 = 1111111 = 127
0000010 => 1111101 + 1 = 1111110 = 126
... all are absolute values, where sign need to be prepend (left-most bit ? - : +)
+ 2
this is not strictly a byte overflow, as the int you cast to byte stand in 8 unsigned bits.
however, byte store signed 8 bits values, so left-most bit is used as sign (minus if > 127), and others 7 right-most bits are used as 2-complement (because that's the usual way to store negative binary numbers without breaking math operations)
2-complement isn't really human easy understandable (we will read those negative number more easilly with just setting the left-most bit, but we will have a +0 and -0, and we will broke math operations)...
+ 1
Kakai sorry, my previous answer was for c# instead of Java. Java's 'byte' is equivalent to c#'s 'sbyte'
In Java, the data type 'byte' is a signed 8 bit data type, meaning it has a total amount of value 'slots' equal to 256 and because it is signed half of the slots are negative. What this means is 'byte' can only have values between -128 and 127(not 128 because 0 counts.)
When a value greater than the max value is set it wraps around back to the minimum number by the excess amount. Think of it as a time line where the left and right end aren't infinity but your max and minimum values.
(int) 127 => (byte) 127
(int) 128 => (byte) -128
(int) 129 => (byte) -127
See this program output to compare a list of ints to their byte values.
https://code.sololearn.com/c6p1X79Um4GT/?ref=app
0
visph look i have this pattern,
If container a = 127,
//Output will be 127
If container a = 128
//Output will be -128
If container a = 129
//Output will be -127
If container a = 130
//Output will be -126
And so on...
Is that the meaning of ur explaination?
0
Or something else?