Question

When I run the following code,it works fine for C:

#include<stdio.h>

int main(void)
{

const int x=5;
char arr[x];
printf("%d",sizeof(arr));

}

But not only had I read before that const qualified variables are not real constants (that's why they can't be used in case condition of switch-case),but the following link from IBM corroborates that (IBMLINK) and says:

 const int k = 10;
 int ary[k];     /* allowed in C++, not legal in C */

Why then am I allowed to use a const qualified variable in C as an array size without any error?

Was it helpful?

Solution

c99 support variable length arrays but c90 does not support variable length arrays, you can see this more clearly if you are using gcc and try to compile with these arguments:

gcc -std=c89 -pedantic

this will give you the following warning:

warning: ISO C90 forbids variable length array ‘y’ [-Wvla]

but if you compile using c99 it is perfectly fine:

gcc -std=c99 -pedantic 

As pointed out by John Bode as of the 2011 C standard variable length arrays(VLA) are now optional. Here is a Dr Dobbs article on VLA and also a link to the gcc docs as pointed out by Wayne Conrad.

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