The C99 standard added all sorts of useful ways to initialize structures, but did not provide a repeat operator (which Fortran has had since forever - but maybe that was why it wasn't added).
If you are using a sufficiently recent version of GCC and you can afford to use a non-portable extension, then GCC provides an extension. In the GCC 8.1.0 manual (§6.27 Designated Initializers), it says:
To initialize a range of elements to the same value, write ‘[first ... last] = value’.
This is a GNU extension. For example,
int widths[] = { [0 ... 9] = 1, [10 ... 99] = 2, [100] = 3 };
If the value in it has side-effects, the side-effects will happen only once, not for each initialized field by the range initializer.
So, using this in your example:
struct memPermissions memPermissions[numBoxes] =
{
[0..numBoxes-1] = {-1, -1}, // GCC extension
};
I wish this were in the C Standard; it would be so helpful!
Without using that or other similar compiler-specific mechanisms, your only choice is a loop. For a complex initializer with many fields, not all the same value, you can probably use:
#include <string.h>
#include "memperm.h" // Header declaring your types and variables
static int initialized = 0;
// -2 so the initialization isn't uniform and memset() is not an option
static const struct memPermissions initPermissions = { -1, -2 };
struct memPermissions memPermissions[numBoxes];
void initialize_permissions(void)
{
if (initialized == 0)
{
for (int i = 0; i < numBoxes; i++)
memmove(&memPermissions[i], &initPermissions, sizeof(initPermissions));
initialized = 1;
}
}
You can also use memcpy()
here - there is no danger of the two variables overlapping.
Now you just need to ensure that initialize_permissions()
is called before the array is used - preferably just once. There may be compiler-specific mechanisms to allow that, too.
You could use a local variable in the initialize_permissions()
function in place of the initialized static constant variable - just be sure your compiler doesn't initialize it every time the function is called.
If you have a C99 compiler, you can use a compound literal in place of the constant:
void initialize_permissions(void)
{
if (initialized == 0)
{
for (int i = 0; i < numBoxes; i++)
memmove(&memPermissions[i],&(struct memPermissions){ -1, -2 },
sizeof(memPermissions[0]));
initialized = 1;
}
}
int
(just int, short, long, long long or char), you canmemset
the array to -1