I'm having trouble understanding when and why exactly a member in my class is zero-initialized according to http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/zero_initialization.
Consider the following test program:
#include <iostream>
#include <stdio.h>
class MyTest {
private:
const static unsigned int dimension = 8;
void (* myFunctions [dimension])();
public:
MyTest() {}
void print() {
for(unsigned int i=0; i < MyTest::dimension; i++) {
printf("myFunctions[%d] = %p
", i, this->myFunctions[i]);
}
}
};
int main() {
//We declare and initialize an object on the stack
MyTest testObj = {};
testObj.print();
return 0;
}
I am declaring a class to have an array of 8 function pointers of the signature "void functionname()". When I declare and initialize an object of the class in main
as MyTest testObj = {};
or MyTest testObj;
, I expected it to be zero-initialized, i.e. all pointers are null pointers.
However, compiling with g++ 5.3.0 on my Windows 10 machine with g++ -m32 -o test -std=c++14 test.cpp && test
machine gives the output:
myFunctions[0] = 76dd6b7d
myFunctions[1] = 00401950
myFunctions[2] = 0061ff94
myFunctions[3] = 004019ab
myFunctions[4] = 00401950
myFunctions[5] = 00000000
myFunctions[6] = 003cf000
myFunctions[7] = 00400080
Which look like un-initialized values from the stack..
If I move the declaration of the object outside of main (as a global variable), it prints all zeroes again.
If I have understood cppreference correctly, this is because I have a variariable with static storage duration, and is thus zero-initialized. It initializes my class type by zero-initializing all non-static data members of my class (i.e., the myFunctions
) array. An array is initialized by zero-initializing every element of it, which, in my function pointer case, is a null pointer.
Why does it not zero-initialize my object the stack when I declare it with MyTest testObj = {};
?
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