@Lapys I think I know C better than whoever wrote that crap. Let's start with question 1. The correct answer is "at least 2", but we can't really say any more than that. The size of each object is always at least 1. But we could have a system with 16-bit bytes, in which case both char and int can be 1 byte apiece, giving a size of 2. Bytes are more often 8 bits, in which case the minimum size is 3, as int is only required to have a range from -32767 to +32767.
Skipping forward to your question (3, I guess), again his answer is almost complete nonsense. First of all, char is unique among integer types in one respect: other integer types are always signed by default. char may be either signed or unsigned by default. If it's unsigned, then the overflow produces defined results, but we don't know for sure what they are without knowing how many bits there are in a char--which has to be at least 8, but could be more.
If it's signed, the result is simply undefined. The answer he gives is what you'd expect on with a signed, 8-bit, 2's complement char. But in general, it's just plain wrong.
Oh, for question 2, the correct answer also depends. His assumes that sizeof(int) == 4, and sizeof(short) == 2, so the result will be 0. That's fairly common, but not required. It's also possible to have sizeof(int) == sizeof(short) == 2, in which case the result would be true (1). And this isn't purely an abstract possibility either--at one time it was quite common.
@Morwenn Guilty. But the fact that he's asking stupid questions doesn't strike me as promising. Looking through the rest, literally none of his questions has a really good answer given.
@Morwenn But even looking through his explanations, they're still semi-poor. He gives one explanation for why we don't know the result in each case, but in some of them there are two or three different problems, of which he really explains only one.
@Morwenn Hmm...not sure what preservation would have to do with it. Most people who know me seem to think I'm actually pretty well preserved for my age, but I doubt that really means much.
I can understand if you are giving out your pet and want the pet to be given to a good household, but do the soil or used timber (with nails still in it) need to go to a good home as well?
If I was in the mood, I could troll the website with 'Cockroaches, free to good homes! '
@JerryCoffin I could actually see it getting more common again too. AI stuff seems to thrive off of 16bit values. So I could absolutely see an environment where everything is 16bit at the low end. Or someone could pull an Alpha AXP and just make int 64bit because why have hardware to do math at partial registers sizes.
I've been patching random CMakefiles for 6 hours now. What is my life
also, why do all the ML folks stack frameworks on top of frameworks and name them so confusingly. Why would I need to know that onnxruntime 1.9.0 is not compilable with onnx 1.9.0