The long double type was present in the original 1989 C standard, but support was improved by the 1999 revision of the C standard, or C99, which extended the standard library to include functions operating on long double such as sinl and strtold. Long double constants are floating-point constants suffixed with "L" or "l", e.g., 0.333333333333333333L. Without a suffix, the evaluation depends on FLT_EVAL_METHOD.
Implementations
On the x86 architecture, most C compilers implement long double as the 80-bit extended precision type supported by x86 hardware, as specified in the C99 / C11 standards. An exception is Microsoft Visual C++ for x86, which makes long double a synonym for double. The Intel C++ compiler on Microsoft Windows supports extended precision, but requires the /Qlong‑double switch for long double to correspond to the hardware's extended precision format. Compilers may also use long double for the . This is the case on HP-UX, Solaris/SPARC, MIPS with the 64-bit or n32 ABI, and 64-bit ARM machines. Most implementations are in software, but some processors have hardware support. On some PowerPC and SPARCv9 machines, long double is implemented as a double-double arithmetic, where a long double value is regarded as the exact sum of two double-precision values, giving at least a 106-bit precision; with such a format, the long double type does not conform to the IEEE floating-point standard. Otherwise, long double is simply a synonym for double, e.g. on 32-bit ARM and on 32-bit MIPS. With the GNU C Compiler, long double is 80-bit extended precision on x86 processors regardless of the physical storage used for the type, On some other architectures, long double can be double-double or 128-bit quadruple precision. As of gcc 4.3, a quadruple precision is also supported on x86, but as the nonstandard type __float128 rather than long double. Although the x86 architecture, and specifically the x87 floating-point instructions on x86, supports 80-bit extended-precision operations, it is possible to configure the processor to automatically round operations to double precision. Conversely, in extended-precision mode, extended precision may be used for intermediate compiler-generated calculations even when the final results are stored at a lower precision. With gcc on Linux, 80-bit extended precision is the default; on several BSDoperating systems, double-precision mode is the default, and long double operations are effectively reduced to double precision. . However, it is possible to override this within an individual program via the FLDCW "floating-point load control-word" instruction. On x86_64 the BSDs default to 80-bit extended precision. Microsoft Windows with Visual C++ also sets the processor in double-precision mode by default, but this can again be overridden within an individual program. The Intel C++ Compiler for x86, on the other hand, enables extended-precision mode by default. On IA-32 OS X, long double is 80-bit extended precision.
Other specifications
In CORBA, "the long double data type represents an IEEE double-extended floating-point number, which has an exponent of at least 15 bits in length and a signed fraction of at least 64 bits", with GIOP/IIOP CDR, whose floating-point types "exactly follow the IEEE standard formats for floating point numbers", marshalling this as what seems to be IEEE 754-2008 binary128 a.k.a. quadruple precision without using that name.