I was looking at the question Single quotes vs. double quotes in C. I couldn't completely understand the explanation given so I wrote a program
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
char ch = 'a';
printf("sizeof(ch) :%d\n", sizeof(ch));
printf("sizeof(\'a\') :%d\n", sizeof('a'));
printf("sizeof(\"a\") :%d\n", sizeof("a"));
printf("sizeof(char) :%d\n", sizeof(char));
printf("sizeof(int) :%d\n", sizeof(int));
return 0;
}
I compiled them using both gcc and g++ and these are my outputs
gcc:
sizeof(ch) : 1
sizeof('a') : 4
sizeof("a") : 2
sizeof(char) : 1
sizeof(int) : 4
g++:
sizeof(ch) : 1
sizeof('a') : 1
sizeof("a") : 2
sizeof(char) : 1
sizeof(int) : 4
The g++ output makes sense to me and I don't have any doubt regarding that. In gcc what is the need to have sizeof('a') to be different from sizeof(char). Is there some actual reason behind it or is it just historical?
Also in C if char and 'a' have different size does that mean when we are doing
char ch = 'a'; we are doing implicit type-conversion?


sizeof("a") : 2- all these years, and I always assumed that would be the same assizeof(char*)- I might have actually used it if I had known otherwise. – Steve314 May 22 '12 at 19:28