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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T20:51:52+00:00 2026-05-10T20:51:52+00:00

This is a follow up question . So, Java store’s integers in two’s-complements and

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This is a follow up question. So, Java store’s integers in two’s-complements and you can do the following:

int ALPHA_MASK = 0xff000000; 

In C# this requires the use of an unsigned integer, uint, because it interprets this to be 4278190080 instead of -16777216.

My question, how do declare negative values in hexadecimal notation in c#, and how exactly are integers represented internally? What are the differences to Java here?

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  1. 2026-05-10T20:51:52+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 8:51 pm

    C# (rather, .NET) also uses the two’s complement, but it supports both signed and unsigned types (which Java doesn’t). A bit mask is more naturally an unsigned thing – why should one bit be different than all the other bits?

    In this specific case, it is safe to use an unchecked cast:

    int ALPHA_MASK = unchecked((int)0xFF000000); 

    To ‘directly’ represent this number as a signed value, you write

    int ALPHA_MASK = -0x1000000; // == -16777216 

    Hexadecimal is not (or should not) be any different from decimal: to represent a negative number, you need to write a negative sign, followed by the digits representing the absolute value.

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