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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T16:27:47+00:00 2026-05-13T16:27:47+00:00

I have a program in C++ that has a BYTE array that stores some

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I have a program in C++ that has a BYTE array that stores some values. I need to find the length of that array i.e. number of bytes in that array. Please help me in this regard.

This is the code:

BYTE *res;
res = (BYTE *)realloc(res, (byte_len(res)+2));

byte_len is a fictitious function that returns the length of the BYTE array and I would like to know how to implement it.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T16:27:48+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 4:27 pm

    Given your code:

    BYTE *res;
    res = (BYTE *)realloc(res, (byte_len(res)+2));
    

    res is a pointer to type BYTE. The fact that it points to a contiguous sequence of n BYTES is due to the fact that you did so. The information about the length is not a part of the pointer. In other words, res points to only one BYTE, and if you point it to the right location, where you have access to, you can use it to get BYTE values before or after it.

    BYTE data[10];
    BYTE *res = data[2];
    /* Now you can access res[-2] to res[7] */
    

    So, to answer your question: you definitely know how many BYTEs you allocated when you called malloc() or realloc(), so you should keep track of the number.

    Finally, your use of realloc() is wrong, because if realloc() fails, you leak memory. The standard way to use realloc() is to use a temporary:

    BYTE *tmp;
    tmp = (BYTE *)realloc(res, n*2);
    if (tmp == NULL) {
        /* realloc failed, res is still valid */
    } else {
        /* You can't use res now, but tmp is valid. Reassign */
        res = tmp;
    }
    
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