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Home/ Questions/Q 8538299
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 11, 20262026-06-11T11:06:07+00:00 2026-06-11T11:06:07+00:00

I have an open-source codebase that is written in both C and C++. I’m

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I have an open-source codebase that is written in both C and C++. I’m looking for an integer type that is guaranteed to be at least 64 bits wide, which can be reliably compiled on most OS X (Intel, 64-bit) and Linux boxes with open-source C and C++ compilers, without too much extra work on the end user’s part. Windows and 32-bit client support are not important at this time.

I did some testing on OS X, and the latest GCC that ships with the developer tools does not support C+11 mode (and therefore does not seem to guarantee availability of long long). Clang does not support this, either, though it supports long long if C99 mode is enabled, after a certain version.

Is the general suggestion to use int64_t in place of long long, when portability is an important goal? Using the format specifiers seems painful.

Can I reliably cast an int64_t to long long (and likewise to the unsigned equivalent with uint64_t) to use it with existing functions and libraries that take long long as parameters? (And back again, of course.)

In that frame of mind, if I ship code that requires Clang functionality not in GCC, is Clang going to replace GCC as the compiler of choice on Linux? Is that compiler something I can expect, for the most part, when offering source code to end users?

Basically, I’d like to ask for some advice from other developers who have used both types for portable C and C++ code, who might have some suggestions on what might be the better long-term way to go, given the above goal in mind.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-11T11:06:07+00:00Added an answer on June 11, 2026 at 11:06 am

    The types long long and unsigned long long are standard C and standard C++ types each with at least 64 bits. All compilers I’m aware of provide these types, except possibly when in a -pedantic mode but in this case int64_t or uint64_t won’t be available with pre-C++ 2011 compilers, either. On all of the systems <stdint.h> is available, too. That is, as far as I can tell it doesn’t matter much how you spell the type. The main goal of <stdint.h> is to provide the best match for a specific number of bits. If you need at least 64 bit but you also want to take advantage of the fasted implementation of such a type, you’d use int_least64_t or uint_least64_t from <stdint.h> or <cstdint> (in case of the latter, the names are defined in namespace std).

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