I was trying to learn the array fundamentals in Java and this question arises:
Version 1:
int[] x = {12,34,56,78};
Version 2:
int[] x;
x = {12,34,56,78};
Version 1 is correct but version 2 is incorrect.
Why is this the case? What is the story behind it?
Please, describe this from a compiler-oriented point of view.
int x[] = {12, 34, 56, 78};
.int [] x
is a syntax error.int x[4]; x = {12, 34, 56, 78};
is not allowed, since a number of answers are addressing the uninteresting fact that the type is incomplete at declaration (due to the unknown array size) and not whether there is a grammatical or semantic reason not to allow the latter assignment.{...}
is an initializer-list. An initializer-list is allowed during initialization (6.7.8). There is no corresponding clause for assignment-expression (6.5.16) that allows an initializer-list. In other words, it's disallowed because there is no rule that allows it.