Difference between uint32 and uint32_t [duplicate]
Possible Duplicate:
Difference between different integer types
What is the difference between uint32 and uint32_t in C/C++?
Are they OS-dependent?
In which case should I use one or another?
uint32_t
is standard, uint32
is not. That is, if you include <inttypes.h>
or <stdint.h>
, you will get a definition of uint32_t
. uint32
is a typedef in some local code base, but you should not expect it to exist unless you define it yourself. And defining it yourself is a bad idea.
uint32_t
is defined in the standard, in
18.4.1 Header <cstdint>
synopsis [cstdint.syn]
namespace std {
//...
typedef unsigned integer type uint32_t; // optional
//...
}
uint32
is not, it's a shortcut provided by some compilers (probably as typedef uint32_t uint32
) for ease of use.