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I am trying to create an array of ifstream objects, the code compiles and I am able to create the array of ifstream objects of size sizeargs-1 however once I try to open a file in one of the ifstream objects the program crashes, it's very frustrating.

the reason I am trying it this was is that I have to dynamically create ifstream objects based on the number of .ppm files in memory and this seemed like the perfect solution, just being able to ifstream_array[1].open(args[0]); since I need to read text from multiple .ppm files simultaneously.

If doing this is impossible; is there an alternative way of doing it?

int main(int argc, char ** args)
{
        //counts number of .ppm files in array       
        int sizeargs = (sizeof(args)/sizeof(*args)); 

        ifstream inputfiles[sizeargs-1];

        int incounter = 0;

        //this is where the program crashes
        inputfiles[incounter].open(args[0]); 
}

2 Answers 2

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int sizeargs = (sizeof(args)/sizeof(*args)); //counts number of .ppm files in array

No, it doesn't. This evaluates to sizeof(char**) / sizeof(char*), which is always 1. sizeargs-1 is thus 0 and you have no items in your array. You cannot find the size of an array via a pointer to it. You need to use argc, which is the number of elements in args.


Based on the comments, you should also avoid variable length arrays, as they are availabe only with compiler extensions and are not part of the C++ standard. I would recommend using a vector instead:

    std::vector<std::ifstream> inputfiles(sizeargs-1);
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    In addition ifstream inputfiles[sizeargs-1]; isn't valid. The size of an array must be a constant. This is not standard C++ and will only work if the compiler allows an extension.
    – jcoder
    Apr 17, 2014 at 13:28
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    You're in C++. Why not use std::vector where the allocations and sizing are easier? Apr 17, 2014 at 13:29
  • It's not really an array, but rather pointer to array of pointers. Apr 17, 2014 at 13:30
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    Usually 1, not always. There are (or have been) machines on which a char* is larger than a char** (in which case, it will be 0). Apr 17, 2014 at 13:34
  • thanks, a classmate gave me that code (sizeof(args)/sizeof(*args));, I assumed it was correct, one problem I know to fix anyway Apr 17, 2014 at 13:34
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This statement:

    int sizeargs = (sizeof(args)/sizeof(*args)); //counts number of .ppm files in array

will always yield sizeargs = 1 on *a modern compiler, since the size of a basic data pointer divided by the size of a basic data pointer, is 1.


In C++11 and earlier this statement:

    ifstream inputfiles[sizeargs-1];

is invalid, since the size of a (not dynamically allocated) raw array must be a compile time constant.

However, g++ offers C99 variable length arrays (VLAs) as a language extension.


Instead, use a std::vector.

* As James Kanze points out in a comment to another answer, there have been machines where sizeof(char*) was larger than sizeof(char**). Since char is the basic addressable unit, a char* pointer is the largest ordinary pointer. I didn't think that distinction would be relevant here, but reading James' comment (and we have discussed this in the past), I realized that my attitude to the "worth" of an SO answer, is wrong, and adjusted accordingly.

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