| Copyright | (c) The University of Glasgow 2001 |
|---|---|
| License | BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE) |
| Maintainer | [email protected] |
| Stability | experimental |
| Portability | portable |
| Safe Haskell | Safe |
| Language | Haskell2010 |
Unsigned integer types.
A Word is an unsigned integral type, with the same size as Int.
8-bit unsigned integer type
16-bit unsigned integer type
32-bit unsigned integer type
64-bit unsigned integer type
byteSwap16 :: Word16 -> Word16 Source
Swap bytes in Word16.
Since: 4.7.0.0
byteSwap32 :: Word32 -> Word32 Source
Reverse order of bytes in Word32.
Since: 4.7.0.0
byteSwap64 :: Word64 -> Word64 Source
Reverse order of bytes in Word64.
Since: 4.7.0.0
negate should not raise an error on negative arguments.fromIntegral, which is specialized for all the common cases so should be fast enough. Coercing word types to and from integer types preserves representation, not sign.Natural.Enum instances over a bounded type such as Int (see the section of the Haskell report dealing with arithmetic sequences) also hold for the Enum instances over the various Word types defined here.1 <<
32 == 1 in some C implementations.
© The University of Glasgow and others
Licensed under a BSD-style license (see top of the page).
https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/7.10.3/docs/html/libraries/base-4.8.2.0/Data-Word.html