The following table shows the supported data types, including storage sizes and ranges.
Data type | Storage size | Range | |
---|---|---|---|
Byte | 1 byte | 0 to 255 | |
Boolean | 2 bytes | True or False | |
Integer | 2 bytes | -32,768 to 32,767 | |
Long (long integer) |
4 bytes | -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647 | |
LongPtr (Long integer on 32-bit systems, LongLong integer on 64-bit systems) |
4-bytes on 32-bit systems, 8-bytes on 64-bit systems. | -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647 on 32-bit systems, -9,223,372,036,854,775,808 to 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 on 64-bit systems. | |
LongLong (LongLong integer) |
8 bytes | -9,223,372,036,854,775,808 to 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 (Valid on 64-bit platforms only.) | |
Single (single-precision floating-point) |
4 bytes | -3.402823E38 to -1.401298E-45 for negative values; 1.401298E-45 to 3.402823E38 for positive values | |
Double (double-precision floating-point) |
8 bytes | -1.79769313486231E308 to -4.94065645841247E-324 for negative values; 4.94065645841247E-324 to 1.79769313486232E308 for positive values |
|
Currency (scaled integer) |
8 bytes | -922,337,203,685,477.5808 to 922,337,203,685,477.5807 | |
Decimal | 14 bytes | +/-79,228,162,514,264,337,593,543,950,335 with no decimal point; +/-7.9228162514264337593543950335 with 28 places to the right of the decimal; smallest non-zero number is +/-0.0000000000000000000000000001 |
|
Date | 8 bytes | January 1, 100 to December 31, 9999 | |
Object | 4 bytes | Any Object reference | |
String (variable-length) |
10 bytes + string length | 0 to approximately 2 billion | |
String (fixed-length) |
Length of string | 1 to approximately 65,400 | |
Variant (with numbers) |
16 bytes | Any numeric value up to the range of a Double | |
Variant (with characters) |
22 bytes + string length | Same range as for variable-length String | |
User-defined (using Type) |
Number required by elements | The range of each element is the same as the range of its data type. |
Note Arrays of any data type require 20 bytes of memory plus 4 bytes for each array dimension plus the number of bytes occupied by the data itself. The memory occupied by the data can be calculated by multiplying the number of data elements by the size of each element. For example, the data in a single-dimension array consisting of 4 Integer data elements of 2 bytes each occupies 8 bytes. The 8 bytes required for the data plus the 24 bytes of overhead brings the total memory requirement for the array to 32 bytes.
A Variant containing an array requires 12 bytes more than the array alone.
Note LongPtr is not a true data type because it transforms to a Long in 32-bit environments, or a LongLong in 64-bit environments. LongPtr should be used to represent pointer and handle values in Declare Statements and enables writing portable code that can run in both 32-bit and 64-bit environments.
Note LongPtr is P>