I create an array, similar to classic C (not NSArray or one of it's children) - something like BOOL i[5];. And I want to make all its values to be equal to NO.

First of all, I didn't found any information about initial values of such arrays (I know that in classic C they will be undefined, but don't know exactly about Objective-C. I found info about classes and its inner data [after allocation, without initialization], but not about simple data types).

And the second, if I should set array values manually - should I use memset(...); or something different?

To prevent possible questions... I want to use this construction as array of temporary boolean flags and don't think that it is proved to use something like NSArray here.

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2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

If that BOOL i[5] is an ivar of an ObjC class, its content will be initialized (memset-ed) to 0.

As described in the +alloc method:

... memory for all other instance variables is set to 0.


To set the array to all NO in other situations, you could use

memset(i, 0, sizeof(i));
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Yes. And if it's not you can explicitly memset it to zero to for NO as the default. – Jakob Borg Jun 11 '10 at 9:24
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Even if it is 0-ed instead of undef like in C, a proper initialization should set all values explicitly since you can't know if NO is 0 (it is, but hypotethically...!), so simply:

for(j = 0; j < 5; j++) i[j] = NO;

could do the job.

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