/* ** Demonstration of Type Conversion ** across assignments. */ main() 	{ 	char c1,c2,c3; 	int i1,i2,i3; 	float f1,f2,f3;  	c1 = 'x';	/* no conversion */ 	c2 = 1000;	/* int constant demoted to char */ 	c3 = 6.02e23;	/* float constant demoted to char */ 	printf("%c  %c  %c\n",c1,c2,c3);  /* Note that the character value is printed as is; the integer ** with a value of 1000 is converted to its binary equivalent ** of 1111101000 and truncated to the first 8 data bits which ** gives 11101000 or decimal 232 or the Greek symbol "phi" ** when the ASCII symbol is printed; and the conversion from ** float to char is meaningless and does not occur.  */  	i1 = 'x';	/* char constant promoted to int */ 	i2 = 1000;	/* no conversion */ 	i3 = 6.02e23;	/* float constant demoted to int */ 	printf("%d  %d  %d\n",i1,i2,i3);  /* Note that ASCII 'x' has an integer value of 120, and the  ** character constant 'x' is promoted when we assign it to an ** integer.  The floating point constant is demoted to the  ** largest integer 32767 that is possible in the Microsoft ** C compiler and that number is returned as an integer. */  	f1 = 'x';	/* x char constant promoted to float */ 	f2 = 1000;	/* int constant promoted to float */ 	f3 = 6.02e23;	/* no conversion */ 	printf("%f %f %f\n",f1,f2,f3);  /* There are no demoted values, everything is represented as ** its double precision floating point equivalent!   */	};  /* There are no demoted values, everything is represented as ** its double preci