Question

The following line of code, which creates a variable-length array on the stack:

char name[length] = {'\0'};

Generates the following compiler diagnostics:

error: variable-sized object may not be initialized
warning: excess elements in array initializer
warning: (near initialization for ‘name’)

What options are available to me for initializing VLAs? Am I forced to use a line such as:

memset(name, 0, sizeof(name));

Instead?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Yes, you must write code for the initialisation of VLAs (which could be a memset() like you have described, or any other way that you care to).

It is simply a constraint in the C standard (§6.7.8):

  1. The type of the entity to be initialized shall be an array of unknown size or an object type that is not a variable length array type.
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