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Home/ Questions/Q 780817
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T20:08:05+00:00 2026-05-14T20:08:05+00:00

I came up with this as a quick solution to a debugging problem –

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I came up with this as a quick solution to a debugging problem – I have the pointer variable and its type, I know it points to an array of objects allocated on the heap, but I don’t know how many. So I wrote this function to look at the cookie that stores the number of bytes when memory is allocated on the heap.

template< typename T >
int num_allocated_items( T *p )
{
return *((int*)p-4)/sizeof(T);
}

//test
#include <iostream>
int main( int argc, char *argv[] )
{
    using std::cout; using std::endl;
    typedef long double testtype;
    testtype *p = new testtype[ 45 ];

    //prints 45
    std::cout<<"num allocated = "<<num_allocated_items<testtype>(p)<<std::endl;
    delete[] p;
    return 0;
}

I’d like to know just how portable this code is.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T20:08:05+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 8:08 pm

    It is not even remotely portable.

    An implementation can perform heap bookkeeping however it wants and there is absolutely no way to portably get the size of a heap allocation unless you keep track of it yourself (which is what you should be doing).

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