Comment by Validark
20 hours ago
I am personally moving in the opposite direction. I haven't meaningfully used a signed integer in years, and I see signed integers as being for more niche use-cases. I mainly only use a signed types when I want to do a "signed shift right". If there was a >>> operator in Zig I wouldn't even think of signed integers.
Given your examples, I think you'd have fewer issues if you were working with unsigned integers exclusively. Although I'm curious about what other code you were referencing with this: "But seeing how each change both made the code easier to reason about and more correct, I couldn’t deny the evidence."
With regards to modulo, in Zig if you try to use it with a signed integer it will tell you to specify whether you want `@mod` or `@rem` semantics. In my case, I'd almost never write `x % 2`, I'd write `x & 1`. I do use unsigned division but I'd pretty much never write code that would emit the `div` instruction.
I'm not saying you're wrong though! Everyone has a different mind. If you attain higher correctness and understandability through using signed integers, that's great. I'm just saying I'm in the opposite camp.
Zig also differentiates between the wrapping and non-wrapping operators. The for loop example would toss a runtime error when the index underflowed in most compiler modes.
The if statement won't work since Zig would force a cast.
The tricky wrap sucks unless you use a power of 2. Then the Zig type can match (u4, u5, u7, etc.) and you would use wrapping arithmetic operators. And on smaller CPUs you NEED to use a power of 2 because division and mod are expensive.