Common Visual C++ 64-bit Migration Issues
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When you use Visual C++ to create applications to run on a 64-bit Windows operating system, you should be aware of the following issues:
An
int
and along
are 32-bit values on 64-bit Windows operating systems. For programs that you plan to compile for 64-bit platforms, you should be careful not to assign pointers to 32-bit variables. Pointers are 64-bit on 64-bit platforms, and you will truncate the pointer value if you assign it to a 32-bit variable.size_t
,time_t
, andptrdiff_t
are 64-bit values on 64-bit Windows operating systems.time_t
is a 32-bit value on 32-bit Windows operating systems in Visual C++ versions before Visual C++ 2005.time_t
is now a 64-bit integer by default. For more information, see Time Management.You should be aware of where your code takes an
int
value and processes it as asize_t
ortime_t
value. It is possible that the number could grow to be larger than a 32-bit number and data will be truncated when it is passed back to theint
storage.
The %x (hex int
format) printf
modifier will not work as expected on a 64-bit Windows operating system. It will only operate on the first 32 bits of the value that is passed to it.
Use %I32x to display a 32-bit integral type in hex format.
Use %I64x to display a 64-bit integral type in hex format.
The %p (hex format for a pointer) will work as expected on a 64-bit Windows operating system.
For more information, see:
See Also
Configuring Programs for 64-Bit
Visual C++ Porting and Upgrading Guide