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Home/ Questions/Q 7009859
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T21:54:59+00:00 2026-05-27T21:54:59+00:00

Let’s I have struct Vector { float i,j,k; } I want to zero all

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Let’s I have

struct Vector {

    float i,j,k;
}

I want to zero all elements of vec declared below (i,j,k=0)

std::vector <Vector> vec;
vec.resize(num,0);

I don’t want to use reserve() and then push_back() zeroes one by one.
Another thing is, after succesfully initializing vec, I want to set all members of vec to zero again after it is manipulated. Is there something like memset for vectors?

EDIT:
I compared all of the methods in Mike Seymour’s and Xeo’s answers and as a result
size_t size = vec.size();
vec.clear();
vec.resize(size);
is the fastest if they are repeated frequently in a loop.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T21:55:00+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 9:55 pm

    That’s very simple:

    vec.resize(num);
    

    or initialise it with the required size:

    std::vector<Vector> vec(num);
    

    Both the constructor and resize will fill new elements with value-initialised objects. A value-initialised object of a type with no default constructor (such as your Vector) will have all numeric members initialised to zero.

    To reset everything to zero, either

    size_t size = vec.size();
    vec.clear();
    vec.resize(size);
    

    or:

    std::fill(vec.begin(), vec.end(), Vector());
    

    or, less efficiently but with a strong exception guarantee:

    std::vector<Vector>(vec.size()).swap(vec);
    
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