Two's Complement Representation
External
Internal
Overview
Two's complement is the most common signed integer representation scheme on computers. It is used to represent both positive and negative numbers, though in the case of a positive number, two's complement representation is identical to the default binary implementation of that number. The scheme is widely used because a computer can use the same circuitry to perform addition, subtraction and multiplication, whereas otherwise they would have to be treated as separate operations. The most significant bit represents the sign - 0 for positive integers, 1 for negative integers - and the rest of the bits are used to represent the value according to the formula shown below. Two's complement has no representation for negative zero, and thus does it not suffer from associated difficulties.
Mathematical Foundation
A two's complement encodes both positive and negative numbers in a binary number representation. Assuming that n bits are available to represent an integral value, the weight of each bit, except the most significant one, is the power of two corresponding to bit's position. The weight of the most significant bit is the negative of the corresponding power of two.
If n bits are available to store the value:
an-1 an-2 ... a2 a1 a0
the value is given by the following formula:
n-2 v = -an-1*2n-1 + ∑ ai2i i=0
Positive integers have the most significant bit 0, and use the rest n-1 bits to represent the value. Their representation is a normal binary representation, where each bit carries a weight that is the power of two of the bit's position.
Negative integer have the most significant bit 1, and use the rest n-1 bits to represent value.
Practical Implications
To quickly find the two's complement representation of a negative number, start with the binary representation of the corresponding positive number, invert all bit values and add 1 to the result.
From a practical perspective, representing a negative number in two's complement simplifies a subtraction operation, by making possible to use the same circuitry that is used for addition: assuming we want to subtract 53 from 71, which is 71 - 53, we express it as 71 + (-53), we represent -53 in two's complement by inverting the digits and adding 1, and then adding those two values.
Examples
byte Representation
short Representation
int Representation
long Representation
Practical Implications
Subtraction
used by most computers to represent signed integral values such as byte, int or long.
Positive numbers
Negative numbers
The primary motivation between this scheme is that