std::numeric_limits<T>::radix
From cppreference.com
static const int radix; |
(until C++11) | |
static constexpr int radix; |
(since C++11) | |
The value of std::numeric_limits<T>::radix is the base of the number system used in the representation of the type. It is 2 for all binary numeric types, but it may be, for example, 10 for IEEE 754 decimal floating-point types or for third-party binary-coded decimal integers. This constant is meaningful for all specializations.
Standard specializations
T
|
value of std::numeric_limits<T>::radix
|
/* non-specialized */
|
0
|
bool
|
2
|
char
|
2
|
signed char
|
2
|
unsigned char
|
2
|
wchar_t
|
2
|
char8_t (since C++20)
|
2
|
char16_t (since C++11)
|
2
|
char32_t (since C++11)
|
2
|
short
|
2
|
unsigned short
|
2
|
int
|
2
|
unsigned int
|
2
|
long
|
2
|
unsigned long
|
2
|
long long (since C++11)
|
2
|
unsigned long long (since C++11)
|
2
|
float
|
FLT_RADIX |
double
|
FLT_RADIX |
long double
|
FLT_RADIX |
See also
[static] |
number of radix digits that can be represented without change (public static member constant) |
[static] |
one more than the smallest negative power of the radix that is a valid normalized floating-point value (public static member constant) |
[static] |
one more than the largest integer power of the radix that is a valid finite floating-point value (public static member constant) |