On Mon, Nov 12, 2018 at 01:03:25PM +0100, Johannes Schindelin wrote: > > oi.disk_size is off_t; do we know "long long" > > > > (1) is available widely enough (I think it is from c99)? > > > > (2) is sufficiently wide so that we can safely cast off_t to? > > > > (3) will stay to be sufficiently wide as machines get larger > > together with standard types like off_t in the future? > > > > I'd rather use intmax_t (as off_t is a signed integral type) so that > > we do not have to worry about these questions in the first place. > > You mean something like > > v->s = xstrfmt("%"PRIdMAX, (intmax_t)oi->disk_size); I think elsewhere we simply use PRIuMAX for printing large sizes via off_t; we know this value isn't going to be negative. I'm not opposed to PRIdMAX, which _is_ more accurate, but... > P.S.: I wondered whether we have precedent for PRIdMAX, as we used to use > only PRIuMAX, but yes: JeffH's json-writer uses PRIdMAX. That's pretty recent. I won't be surprised if we have to do some preprocessor trickery to handle that at some point. We have a PRIuMAX fallback already. That comes from c4001d92be (Use off_t when we really mean a file offset., 2007-03-06), but it's not clear to me if that was motivated by a real platform or an over-abundance of caution. I'm OK with just using PRIdMAX as appropriate for now. It will serve as a weather-balloon, and we can #define our way out of it later if need be. -Peff