uint

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An unsigned integer, or uint, is a numeric datatype that only can hold positive integers. Like it’s name suggests, it represents an unsigned 32-bit integer. The uint keyword itself is an alias for the Common Type System type System.UInt32. This datatype is present in mscorlib.dll, which is implicitly referenced by every C# project when you create them. It occupies four bytes of memory space.

Unsigned integers can hold any value from 0 to 4,294,967,295.

Examples on how and now not to declare unsigned integers

uint i = 425697; // Valid expression, explicitly stated to compiler
var i1 = 789247U; // Valid expression, suffix allows compiler to determine datatype
uint x = 3.0; // Error, there is no implicit conversion

According to Microsoft, it is recommended to use the int datatype wherever possible as the uint datatype is not CLS-compliant.

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Table Of Contents
17 Regex
19 Arrays
21 Enum
22 Tuples
24 GUID
27 Looping
36 Casting
46 Methods
51 Keywords
88 Events
92 Structs
104 Indexer
106 Stream
107 Timers
109 Threading
127 Caching
135 Pointers
147 C# Script