I use uints every day at work. They’re very useful for cases when you’ve only got a single byte or two bytes to work with. E.g. an 8-bit int will only get you to a max of 127, but of course an unsigned 8-bit gets you to 255. Similar concept with 16/32/64s. Very useful when you’re working with small amounts of available memory, such as when writing code to go on ASICs.
The use of it quite limited in the every-day coders life. People acting like they be using 500TB databases these days.
Embedded software devs still exist btw
Stop lying, who in the modern world would need embedded systems?
I don’t see a use for embedded systems that can’t be adequately replaced with a Windows PC smh.
Netcode. I make my own layer 2 headers sometimes.
I use uints every day at work. They’re very useful for cases when you’ve only got a single byte or two bytes to work with. E.g. an 8-bit int will only get you to a max of 127, but of course an unsigned 8-bit gets you to 255. Similar concept with 16/32/64s. Very useful when you’re working with small amounts of available memory, such as when writing code to go on ASICs.