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I have an array of pointers to structs. I want to initialise every element in the array to NULL. I'm going to use this array to dynamically add and remove entries so I want to be able to test against NULL to see if that index is empty.

I tried to do it like this:

struct mystructure *cxs[MAXNOCXS];

int cx_init(void)
{
    int i = 0;
    for (i=0; i<MAXNOCXS; i++)
        cxs[i] == NULL;
    return 0;
}

but my compiler tells me:

error: statement with no effect

referring to the line cxs[i] = NULL;

Are arrays of pointers automatically initialised to NULL in C? If not how could I do that?

3 Answers 3

5

You are using the == operator instead of the = operator. In practice, instead of assigning NULL to cxs[i] (which is what it would do if you used the assignment operator =) you are comparing each element with NULL and discarding the result of such comparison, thus the warning of your compiler.

Notice that you can initialize more simply your array using the notation

struct mystructure * cxs[MAXNOCXS] = {};

This syntax tells to the compiler to default-initialize1 all the elements of the array (since the braces, that would contain explicit initializers, are empty), which means that pointers get initialized to NULL and arithmetic types to 0.

If your array has "static storage duration" (i.e. it's a global or static variable), you don't need to do anything special because it's already default-initialized.


  1. To the value they would be initialized to if they were static variables (C99, §6.7.8 ¶10, ¶21).

Edit

After reading around, it seems that the C standard, unlike the C++ one, do not support empty initializers. Still, you can always do:

struct mystructure * cxs[MAXNOCXS] = {NULL};

which will initialize the first element with NULL, and let the other elements be default-initialized (again to NULL).

5
  • Assuming these variables are in global scope, they are default-initialised even if they're not static. Also, I don't think the standard permits empty initializer lists. May 2, 2011 at 23:01
  • @Oli: correct about static, I was coming from the standard that says static storage duration, which is a different thing, now I correct it. For the empty initializer list, I checked on the fly with gcc 4.5 with -ansi -Wall -Wextra and it didn't complain, now I'll check the standard... May 2, 2011 at 23:05
  • Thanks for the great answers, I should have noticed the typo myself. Also worth noting @Oli's comment that my global variable will already be initialised. May 2, 2011 at 23:07
  • @Oli: apparently you were right, the syntax description in the standard seems not to allow empty initializer lists, and a quick search seem to confirm this fact. May 2, 2011 at 23:16
  • Yeah, the grammar definition appears to prohibit it. May 2, 2011 at 23:17
2

You will notice that your line is cxs[i] == NULL;, and not cxs[i] = NULL; as you intended.

Also, as it appears that your array has been declared at global scope (and therefore has static storage duration), it will have all its elements zero-initialised by default, so the pointers will already all equal NULL. (Note that this most definitely not the case for standard local variables inside functions).

1

It seems you have a typo in your code and accidentally use comparison operator instead of assignment - that's what compiler tells you about

for (i=0; i<MAXNOCXS; i++)
        cxs[i] == NULL;

should be

for (i=0; i<MAXNOCXS; i++)
        cxs[i] = NULL;

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