In C99 You can use designated initializers:
Libri scaffale[150] = { [1] = {"last of mohicans"} };
The problem with your code is that arrays are not assignable. Arrays can be initialized and initialization uses syntax that looks similar to assignment, but it is not the same thing.
If you do need assignment, then what you have to do in C is write a loop that assigns individual elements of the array. Or use a pre-existing function that does this, if the array type is such that there's such a function available. For a null terminated char array there is such a function, called strcpy
.
Although C++ inherits all of C's problems with raw arrays for compatibility, in C++ you can use std::array
to get arrays with more reasonable behavior: they're copiable, assignable, using pass-by-value syntax actually does that instead of inserting some bizarre conversion to a pointer to the first element of the array, etc. And the C++ std::array
type has zero overhead compared to raw arrays: std::array
will result in identical object layout and code generation as raw arrays. The availability of a reasonable array type is one good reason to use C++ over C.
Of course in this case it's likely that in C++ you would have titolo
and autore
be string
s instead arrays, in which case there would be performance differences since the representation would not be identical to raw arrays. Whether the performance would be better or worse depends on the exact program data. The performance could be better due to a more compact representation (the small string optimization), or it could be slower if the string data is too large for that and there end up being a lot of memory allocations.
strcpy()
.