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Revision as of 20:50, 18 April 2009
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
Demonstrate how to get the size of a variable.
Ada
Ada represents the size of a variable in bits, not bytes like many other languages. <lang ada> Int_Bits : constant Integer := Integer'size; Whole_Bytes : constant Integer := Int_Bits / Storage_Unit; -- Storage_Unit is the number of bits per storage element </lang>
C
<lang c> printf("An int contains %d bytes.\n", sizeof(int)); </lang>
C++
Store the size of an int in bytes:
<lang cpp>
- include <cstdlib>
std::size_t intsize = sizeof(int); </lang>
Note: sizeof can be used without the header <cstdlib>; the latter is only needed for the type std::size_t, which is an alias for whatever type is used to store sizes for the given compiler.
Output the number of bits of an int:
<lang cpp>
- include <climits>
- include <cstdlib>
std::size_t intbits = CHAR_BITS*sizeof(int); </lang>
Note: the type char is always 1 byte (which, however, need not be 8 bits).
Get the size of a variable in bytes:
<lang cpp>
- include <cstdlib>
int a = 1; std::size_t a_size = sizeof a; </lang>
Note: Parentheses are needed around types, but not around variables.
Get the size of an expression's type:
<lang cpp>
- include <cstdlib>
std::size_t size = sizeof (3*6 + 7.5); </lang>
D
Every type and variable in D has a property sizeof, which give the size of the type in bytes. eg. <lang d> int i ; writefln(i.sizeof) ; // print 4 int[13] ints1 ; // static integer array of length 13 writefln(ints1.sizeof) ; // print 52 int[] ints2 = new int[13] ; // dynamic integer array, variable length, currently 13 writefln(ints2.sizeof) ; // print 8, all dynamic array has this size writefln(ints2.length) ; // print 13, length is the number of allocated element in aggregated type </lang>
Delphi
<lang delphi> i := sizeof([any variable or structure]); </lang>
Fortran
The intrinsic functions bit_size and digits can be used to find the size of an integer. Bit_size returns the number of bits in an integer while digits returns the number of significant digits in the integer. Because of the use of signed intergers this will be one less than the bit size. Digits can be used on real variables where it returns the number of significant figures in the mantissa. <lang fortran> INTEGER, PARAMETER :: i8 = SELECTED_INT_KIND(2) INTEGER, PARAMETER :: i16 = SELECTED_INT_KIND(4) INTEGER, PARAMETER :: i32 = SELECTED_INT_KIND(8) INTEGER, PARAMETER :: i64 = SELECTED_INT_KIND(16) INTEGER(i8) :: onebyte = 0 INTEGER(i16) :: twobytes = 0 INTEGER(i32) :: fourbytes = 0 INTEGER(i64) :: eightbytes = 0
WRITE (*,*) BIT_SIZE(onebyte), DIGITS(onebyte) ! prints 8 and 7 WRITE (*,*) BIT_SIZE(twobytes), DIGITS(twobytes) ! prints 16 and 15 WRITE (*,*) BIT_SIZE(fourbytes), DIGITS(fourbytes) ! prints 32 and 31 WRITE (*,*) BIT_SIZE(eightbytes), DIGITS(eightbytes) ! prints 64 and 63 WRITE (*,*) DIGITS(0.0), DIGITS(0d0) ! prints 24 and 53 </lang>
Haskell
only works with types that instance Storable: <lang haskell> import Foreign
sizeOf (undefined :: Int) -- size of Int in bytes (4 on mine) sizeOf (undefined :: Double) -- size of Double in bytes (8 on mine) sizeOf (undefined :: Bool) -- size of Bool in bytes (4 on mine) sizeOf (undefined :: Ptr a) -- size of Ptr in bytes (4 on mine) </lang>
IDL
IDL is array based, so its size() function is geared towards that:
arr = intarr(3,4) print,size(arr) ;=> prints this: 2 3 4 2 12
The result means: 2 dimensions in the array, the first dimension has extent 3, the second has extent 4, the elements of the array are 2-byte integers (IDL's default for an "int"), there's a total of 12 elements in the array.
J
In J, the function 7!:5 is analogous to sizeof in C. For example:
some_variable =: 42 7!:5<'some_variable'
An advantage of 7!:5 is that it can be used on any name, including functions, operators, etc (i.e. it's not just restricted to variables):
some_function =: +/ % # 7!:5<'some_function'
Modula-3
BITSIZE and BYTESIZE are built in functions.
<lang modula3> MODULE Size EXPORTS Main;
FROM IO IMPORT Put; FROM Fmt IMPORT Int;
BEGIN
Put("Integer in bits: " & Int(BITSIZE(INTEGER)) & "\n"); Put("Integer in bytes: " & Int(BYTESIZE(INTEGER)) & "\n");
END Size. </lang>
Output:
Integer in bits: 32 Integer in bytes: 4
OCaml
<lang ocaml> (** The result is the size given in word.
The word size in octet can be found with (Sys.word_size / 8). (The size of all the datas in OCaml is at least one word, even chars and bools.)
- )
let sizeof v =
let counted_yet d r = List.exists (fun v -> v == r) d in let rec rec_size d r = if counted_yet d r then (1, d) else if not(Obj.is_block r) then (1, r::d) else if (Obj.tag r) = (Obj.double_tag) then (2, r::d) else if (Obj.tag r) = (Obj.string_tag) then (Obj.size r, r::d) else if (Obj.tag r) = (Obj.object_tag) || (Obj.tag r) = (Obj.closure_tag) then invalid_arg "please only provide datas" else let len = Obj.size r in let rec aux d sum i = if i >= len then (sum, r::d) else let this = Obj.field r i in let this_size, d = rec_size d this in aux d (sum + this_size) (i+1) in aux d (1) 0 in fst(rec_size [] (Obj.repr v))
</lang>
testing in the toplevel: <lang ocaml>
- sizeof 234 ;;
- : int = 1
- sizeof 23.4 ;;
- : int = 2
- sizeof (1,2);;
- : int = 3
- sizeof (2, 3.4) ;;
- : int = 4
- sizeof (1,2,3,4,5) ;;
- : int = 6
- sizeof [| 1;2;3;4;5 |] ;;
- : int = 6
- sizeof [1;2;3;4;5] ;;
- : int = 11
(* because a list is equivalent to *)
- sizeof (1,(2,(3,(4,(5,0))))) ;;
- : int = 11
- type foo = A | B of int | C of int * int ;;
type foo = A | B of int | C of int * int
- sizeof A ;;
- : int = 1
- sizeof (B 3) ;;
- : int = 2
- sizeof (C(1,2)) ;;
- : int = 3
- sizeof true ;;
- : int = 1
- sizeof 'A' ;;
- : int = 1
- sizeof `some_pvar ;;
- : int = 1
- sizeof "" ;;
- : int = 1
- sizeof "Hello!" ;;
- : int = 2 (* remember the size is given in words
(so 4 octets on 32 bits machines) *)
- for i=0 to 16 do
Printf.printf "%d -> %d\n" i (sizeof(String.create i)) done;;
0 -> 1 1 -> 1 2 -> 1 3 -> 1 4 -> 2 5 -> 2 6 -> 2 7 -> 2 8 -> 3 9 -> 3 10 -> 3 11 -> 3 12 -> 4 13 -> 4 14 -> 4 15 -> 4 16 -> 5 - : unit = ()
- sizeof(Array.create 10 0) ;;
- : int = 11
- sizeof(Array.create 10 (String.create 20)) ;;
- : int = 16
- sizeof(Array.init 10 (fun _ -> String.create 20)) ;;
- : int = 61 </lang>
Perl
<lang perl>
use Devel::Size; my $var = 9384752; my @arr = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6); print size($var); print total_size(@arr);
</lang>
Pop11
From abstract point of view Pop11 variables are bindings between identifiers and values. In concrete terms Pop11 variables store references to values in the heap. Each reference takes one machine word (4 bytes on 32-bit machines and 8 bytes on 64-bit machines). Pop11 identifiers take 3 machine words, but are only needed for "permanent" variables (lexical variables do not need identifiers after compilation). Additionally variable names (words) need space (4 machine for word + space for string corresponding to the word). The bottom line is: variable needs one machine word plus some overhead due to introspection.
Form user point of view more important is space taken by values (size of values referenced by a single variable typically varies during program execution). The datasize function gives amount (in machine words) of space directly used by given value:
;;; Prints 0 because small integers need no heap storage datasize(12) => ;;; Prints 3: 3 character fits into single machine word, 1 word ;;; for tag, 1 for length datasize('str') => ;;; 3 element vector takes 5 words: 3 for values, 1 for tag, 1 for ;;; length datasize({1 2 3}) => ;;; Prints 3 because only first node counts datasize([1 2 3]) =>
Note that large amount of data my be referenced from given value, but this data is potentially shared, so there is no canonical way to assign it to a single value or variable.
Tcl
Since all variables are ultimately strings in Tcl, this is easy:
<lang tcl> string bytelength $var </lang>
Toka
There are two primary data types in Toka, cells and characters. The size of these can be obtained easily:
char-size . cell-size .
If you load the floating point support, you can also obtain the size of a floating point number:
needs floats float-size .
All sizes are returned in bytes.