In this code, why is sizeof(x)
the size of a pointer, not the size of the type x
?
typedef struct {
...
} x;
void foo() {
x *x = malloc(sizeof(x));
}
Because C says:
(C99, 6.2.1p7) "Any other identifier has scope that begins just after the completion of its declarator."
So in your example, the scope of the object x
start right after the x *x
:
x *x = /* scope of object x starts here */
malloc(sizeof(x));
To convince yourself, put another object declaration of type x
right after the declaration of the object x
: you will get a compilation error:
void foo(void)
{
x *x = malloc(sizeof(x)); // OK
x *a; // Error, x is now the name of an object
}
Otherwise, as Shahbaz notee in the comments of another answer, this is still not a correct use of malloc
. You should call malloc
like this:
T *a = malloc(sizeof *a);
and not
T *a = malloc(sizeof a);
This is because sizeof(x)
uses the innermost definition of x
, which is the pointer. To avoid this problem, don't use the same name for a type and a variable.
type *var = malloc(sizeof(*var));
instead of malloc(sizeof(type))
var
can change and your code will still be correct. If you use type
instead of var*
then you have to remember to change type
in the declaration and within sizeof
.
Jun 10, 2012 at 12:38
It is a bad idea to not give different things different names (not only in programming):
The academic reason for the behavior observer had already been mentioned by my dear fellow annotators.
To give clear advises name diffenet things differnet (here: variable types and variable instances):
typedef struct {
...
} X;
void foo() {
X *x = malloc(sizeof(X));
}
An even more flexible way to code this example would be (as also already mentioned by Shahbaz's comment):
typedef struct {
...
} X;
void foo() {
X *x = malloc(sizeof(*x));
}
The latter example allows you to change the type of x
without changing the code doing the allocation.
The drawback of this approach is that you could switch from using references to arrays and verse vica (as type for x
) without being notified by the compiler, and break your code doing so.
malloc
. With a bit of sanity your question is "what isx
?"sizeof
mostly used together withmalloc
?sizeof
either. As I said your question is "what isx
?" or even more clearer "which of the twox
to I get here, the type or the pointer variable?"