C++ Notes: Array Initialization has a nice list over initialization of arrays. I have a
int array[100] = {-1};
expecting it to be full with -1’s but its not, only first value is and the rest are 0’s mixed with random values.
The code
int array[100] = {0};
works just fine and sets each element to 0.
What am I missing here.. Can’t one initialize it if the value isn’t zero ?
And 2: Is the default initialization (as above) faster than the usual loop through the whole array and assign a value or does it do the same thing?
Using the syntax that you used,
says “set the first element to
-1and the rest to0” since all omitted elements are set to0.In C++, to set them all to
-1, you can use something likestd::fill_n(from<algorithm>):In portable C, you have to roll your own loop. There are compiler-extensions or you can depend on implementation-defined behavior as a shortcut if that’s acceptable.