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Home/ Questions/Q 665183
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T23:40:54+00:00 2026-05-13T23:40:54+00:00

When you allocate an array using new [] , why can’t you find out

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When you allocate an array using new [], why can’t you find out the size of that array from the pointer? It must be known at run time, otherwise delete [] wouldn’t know how much memory to free.

Unless I’m missing something?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T23:40:54+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 11:40 pm

    In a typical implementation the size of dynamic memory block is somehow stored in the block itself – this is true. But there’s no standard way to access this information. (Implementations may provide implementation-specific ways to access it). This is how it is with malloc/free, this is how it is with new[]/delete[].

    In fact, in a typical implementation raw memory allocations for new[]/delete[] calls are eventually processed by some implementation-specific malloc/free-like pair, which means that delete[] doesn’t really have to care about how much memory to deallocate: it simply calls that internal free (or whatever it is named), which takes care of that.

    What delete[] does need to know though is how many elements to destruct in situations when array element type has non-trivial destructor. And this is what your question is about – the number of array elements, not the size of the block (these two are not the same, the block could be larger than really required for the array itself). For this reason, the number of elements in the array is normally also stored inside the block by new[] and later retrieved by delete[] to perform the proper array element destruction. There are no standard ways to access this number either.

    (This means that in general case, a typical memory block allocated by new[] will independently, simultaneously store both the physical block size in bytes and the array element count. These values are stored by different levels of C++ memory allocation mechanism – raw memory allocator and new[] itself respectively – and don’t interact with each other in any way).

    However, note that for the above reasons the array element count is normally only stored when the array element type has non-trivial destructor. I.e. this count is not always present. This is one of the reasons why providing a standard way to access that data is not feasible: you’d either have to store it always (which wastes memory) or restrict its availability by destructor type (which is confusing).

    To illustrate the above, when you create an array of ints

    int *array = new int[100];
    

    the size of the array (i.e. 100) is not normally stored by new[] since delete[] does not care about it (int has no destructor). The physical size of the block in bytes (like, 400 bytes or more) is normally stored in the block by the raw memory allocator (and used by raw memory deallocator invoked by delete[]), but it can easily turn out to be 420 for some implementation-specific reason. So, this size is basically useless for you, since you won’t be able to derive the exact original array size from it.

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