In C99 this was legal:
void f(size_t sz) {
char arr[sz];
// ...
}
However, this - dynamically sized stack arrays - has been dropped in C++, and not seeing a return in C++11.
AFAIK C++ was made with C compatibility in mind, so I wondered There must be some very good argument of not including this useful feature, right?
All I could think of was this:
Pros
- Memory savings by allowing smarter array sizes that need to be on the stack (temporary buffers?).
- Less "smart pointers" (or worse, manual bug-introducing
delete []
's) and slow heap allocations. - Compatibility with C99.
Cons
- Allows people to easily allocate too large arrays on the stack giving hard-to-debug stack overflows.
- More complicated for compiler writers.
So, why did they didn't they include it when they imported other C99 features?
To prevent this from being closed as "subjective" or "not constructive", I'm looking for quotes from commitee members or links to discussions talking about the matter - with bonus points for a quick SO roundup of course.
Rather than seeing this as a Ponies vs Hamsters discussion, see it as a historical question, mere interest in the advantages and disadvantages that were considered (if at all).
EDIT: As James McNellis pointed out in the comments below C++ existed before C99 standardized variable-length arrays. You might read my question then as: "Why didn't and won't they add it?".