Why is this C code illegal in Visual Studio 2013 Ultimate?
const unsigned int x = 64;
char resultBufNative[x+1];
It gives error C2057: expected constant expression
.
I'm completely baffled by this one.
Relevant function:
jstring Java_com_nabto_api_NabtoCApiWrapper_nabtoGetSessionToken(JNIEnv* env, jclass thiz, jobject sessionObj)
{
const size_t size = 64;
char resultBufNative[size+1];
size_t resultLen;
//Get the session
nabto_handle_t session;
session = (nabto_handle_t) (*env)->GetDirectBufferAddress(env, sessionObj);
nabto_status_t nabtoStatus = nabtoGetSessionToken(session, resultBufNative, size, &resultLen);
if (nabtoStatus == NABTO_OK && resultLen <= size) {
// Terminate char array, convert to java string, free buffer and return result
resultBufNative[resultLen] = 0;
jstring result = (*env)->NewStringUTF(env, resultBufNative);
//nabtoFree(resultBufNative);
return result;
}
else {
return NULL;
}
}
Error message: error C2057: expected constant expression
On line char resultBufNative[size+1];
To me, that makes the relevant code as such:
const size_t size = 64;
char resultBufNative[size+1];
And apparently, const size_t + 1
is not a constant expression.
There are no defines or macros size
dicking about (replacing it with xyzabc gives the same error). size_t
is defined as typedef unsigned int __w64 size_t
when I mouseover size_t
in my IDE (Visual Studio Ultimate 2013).
After the C2057 expected constant expression error, the compiler gives 2 more errors:
C24166: cannot allocate array of size 0
C2133: 'resultBufNative': unknown size
For the same line of code. Naturally, these are because it doesn't know what size + 1
is, so it becomes 0.
Using
constexpr const size_t size = 64;
char resultBufNative[size+1];
Gives error C2065: 'constexpr' : undeclared identifier
.
Using
const size_t size = 65;
char resultBufNative[size];
Gives error C2057: expected constant expression
.
Using
static const size_t size = 64;
char resultBufNative[size+1];
Gives error C2057: expected constant expression
.
Using
const unsigned int x = 64;
char resultBufNative[x+1];
Gives error C2057: expected constant expression
.
I guess what I want to do is not supported.
In C89 mode, the array size must be a compile time constant but size
is not one. const
keyword means read only, not compile time constant (this is different in C++). So you have few options here:
1) Compile in C99 mode which supports VLAs.
2) Use fixed size arrays:
char resultBufNative[64+1];
3) Use
#define size 64
which is basically same as option (2) except preprocessor does that replacement for you.
4) Use enum
as suggested by bluepixy, which is a compile time constant unlike const
.
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