Is it possible to forward declare a static array
I think it is possible to forward declare with the use of pointer if you want to do it with static.
The pointer declaration will serve as your forward declaration. If your /* other code using bitIntArray */
are function definitions which will called be only after you could allocate the memory and initialize them, you can access the elements in the conventional way bigIntArray[index].
static int *bigIntArray; // pointer to static integer
/*other code using bitIntArray: function definitions using forward declaration */
int func()
{
printf("\nfunc %d \n",bigIntArray[3]);
}
int allocate()
{
bigIntArray = new int[5]{1,2,3,4,5};
}
int main()
{
allocate();
func();
return 0;
}
The array, being of static integers, will be limited to your compilation unit only.
Warning: One should always take such decisions based on your priorities.
This way you may increase the readability of the code or whatever other reasons, for which you want forward declaration, but it would be at the expense of heap.
IMO, as D.A has suggested the best option is to use extern within a defined namespace.
extern informs the compiler that the variable is defined elsewhere, and the defined namespace will limit its scope only to the units where the namespace will be used.
namespace limited
{
extern int bigIntArray[];
};
/* other code using bitIntArray */
int func()
{
using namespace limited;
printf("\nfunc %d \n",bigIntArray[3]);
}
namespace limited
{
int bigIntArray[5] ={1,2,3,4,5};
};
int main()
{
func();
return 0;
}