> On Oct 15, 2025, at 12:10 PM, Michael Matz <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> ...
>> And as we're seeing, bool belongs in a third class of integer types, in
>> which it is the only member.  It doesn't belong in the class of unsigned
>> integer types (which is BTW something under discussion in the
>> C Committee at the moment).
> 
> If saturated types are ever included it won't be the only member of that 
> class.  Even absent that the loneliness of bool doesn't imply anything 
> specific.

I don't see how saturation, or the lack of it, is relevant.  "max" and "min" 
are defined in terms of the < operator, so any type for which < is defined can 
define min/max as well.  Python is an example of a language that does this 
uniformly (for example, max("abc","abxq") is valid).

I take it that the C standard says < is defined for boolean type.  That's all 
the answer that seems needed.  Conversely, in a language where < is not a valid 
operator for booleans (such as ALGOL) min/max would not be, either.

        paul

Reply via email to