This Question Is Frequently Asked in Top Core Companies Interviews so you need to aware of Computer System Architecture
For example, a 4 byte, 32-bit integer
Byte3 Byte2 Byte1 Byte0
will be arranged in memory as follows:
Base_Address+0 Byte0
Base_Address+1 Byte1
Base_Address+2 Byte2
Base_Address+3 Byte3
Intel processors use “Little Endian” byte order.
“Big Endian” means that the higher order byte of the number is stored in memory at the lowest address, and the lower order byte at the highest address. The big end comes first.
Base_Address+0 Byte3
Base_Address+1 Byte2
Base_Address+2 Byte1
Base_Address+3 Byte0
Motorola, Solaris processors use “Big Endian” byte order.
In “Little Endian” form, code which picks up a 1, 2, 4, or longer byte number proceed in the same way for all formats. They first pick up the lowest order byte at offset 0 and proceed from there. Also, because of the 1:1 relationship between address offset and byte number (offset 0 is byte 0), multiple precision mathematic routines are easy to code. In “Big Endian” form, since the high-order byte comes first, the code can test whether the number is positive or negative by looking at the byte at offset zero. Its not required to know how long the number is, nor does the code have to skip over any bytes to find the byte containing the sign information. The numbers are also stored in the order in which they are printed out, so binary to decimal routines are particularly efficient.
Here is some code to determine what is the type of your machine
int num = 1;
if(*(char *)&num == 1)
{
printf("\nLittle-Endian\n");
}
else
{
printf("Big-Endian\n");
}
And here is some code to convert from one Endian to another.
int myreversefunc(int num)
{
int byte0, byte1, byte2, byte3;
byte0 = (num & x000000FF) >> 0 ;
byte1 = (num & x0000FF00) >> 8 ;
byte2 = (num & x00FF0000) >> 16 ;
byte3 = (num & xFF000000) >> 24 ;
return((byte0 << 24) | (byte1 << 16) | (byte2 << 8) | (byte3 << 0));
}
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