It's safe provided the int
is zero or positive. If it's negative, and size_t
is of equal or higher rank than int
, then the int
will be converted to size_t
and so its negative value will instead become a positive value. This new positive value is then compared to the size_t
value, which may (in a staggeringly unlikely coincidence) give a false positive. To be truly safe (and perhaps overcautious) check that the int
is nonnegative first:
/* given int i; size_t s; */
if (i>=0 && i == s)
and to suppress compiler warnings:
if (i>=0 && (size_t)i == s)
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