What does the C++ standard say about what sizeof(std::array<char, N>)
should be (for some constant N
)?
In a comment to a different question, it was mentioned that std::array
is not always "stack allocated". The comment was in response to a different comment that speculated that putting a too large of a constant for std::array
that is declared as a local variable could cause the program to abort due to insufficient resources for the "stack allocated" variable. I assume the followup comment meant that it would be possible for std::array
to somehow switch to a dynamic allocation mode.
I could imagine that there could be some kind of SFINAE could be applied for an array size threshold that triggers a specialization of std::array
that actually dynamically allocates an array and manages it. In that case, the sizeof(std::array<...>)
might just be the size of a pointer. Is that allowed to happen?
Obviously sizeof(std::array<char, N>) != N
if N == 0
. It also doesn't necessarily hold for N > 0
.
§23.3.2.1 [array.overview]/p1-2:
The header
<array>
defines a class template for storing fixed-size sequences of objects. An array supports random access iterators. An instance ofarray<T, N>
storesN
elements of typeT
, so thatsize() == N
is an invariant. The elements of an array are stored contiguously, meaning that ifa
is anarray<T, N>
then it obeys the identity&a[n] == &a[0] + n
for all0 <= n < N
.An array is an aggregate (8.5.1) that can be initialized with the syntax
array<T, N> a = { initializer-list };
where
initializer-list
is a comma-separated list of up toN
elements whose types are convertible toT
.
§8.5.1 [dcl.init.aggr]/p1:
An aggregate is an array or a class (Clause 9) with no user-provided constructors (12.1), no private or protected non-static data members (Clause 11), no base classes (Clause 10), and no virtual functions (10.3).
Since array
is an aggregate type, it can't have a custom constructor that performs dynamic allocation, and it must store the elements directly since it must be able to be initialized from a initializer list using aggregate initialization. However, nothing in the standard prevents the implementation from adding extra stuff after its C-style array member, as long as array<T, N> a = { initializer-list };
has the defined semantics when the initializer-list contains at most N
members. An implementation that looks like
template<typename T, size_t N>
struct array {
//typedefs and member functions omitted
T _Elems[N];
double _Because_I_can;
};
// specialization for N == 0 case omitted
is perfectly legal. Therefore, there's no guarantee that sizeof(std::array<char, N>) == N
.
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