$4.2/1 - "An lvalue or rvalue of type “array ofN T” or “array of unknown bound of T” can be converted to an rvalue of type “pointer to T.” The result is a pointer to the first element of the array."

I am not sure how do we get an rvalue of an array type other than during initialization/declaration?

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I'm not sure what you refer to by "initialization/declaration" in this context. But rvalues of array type are not too uncommon.

struct data { int array[10]; };

data f();

int main() { return f().array[0]; }

Now f().array is an rvalue of array type and it will be converted to a pointer. Same for the below C++11 code

template<typename T> using alias = T;

int main() { return alias<int[]>{1, 2, 3}[0]; }

Creating arrays this way on the fly wasn't initially intended to work but slipped into the working draft by-the-way of related work on uniform initialization. When I realized that some paragraphs in the C++0x working draft disallow some special case of this on-the-fly creation of array temporaries while other paragraphs allow it, I sent a defect report to the C++ committee, which then on the basis of GCC's partially working implementation decided to fully support this.

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You cannot get an rvalue of array type. Arrays can only be lvalues, and whenever they are used in an lvalue they decay to a pointer to the first element.

int array[10];
int * p = array; // [1]

The expression array in [1] is an lvalue of type int (&)[10] that gets converted to an rvalue of type int *p, that is, the rvalue array of N==10 T==int is converted to an lvalue of type pointer to T==int.

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Can you please show me an example where the above quote holds good for an Rvalue of Array type? – Chubsdad Sep 7 '10 at 7:57
Is that the reason why functions cannot return array types ? – Cedric H. Sep 7 '10 at 9:34
@Cedric H.: In §8.3.5[dcl.fct]/3 the standard specifies that After determining the type of each parameter, any parameter of type “array of T” or “function returning T” is adjusted to be “pointer to T” or “pointer to function returning T,” respectively. That is, the standard specifies that void foo( char [10] ) is a declaration exactly equivalent to void foo( char\* ) -- that is for arguments. Then in §8.3.5/6 it says: Functions shall not have a return type of type array or function, although they may have a return type of type pointer or reference to such things. for return types – David Rodríguez - dribeas Sep 7 '10 at 10:33
Thanks for clarifying this ! – Cedric H. Sep 7 '10 at 11:50
I downvoted this, because it's wrong. You can have rvalues of array type. – Johannes Schaub - litb Feb 4 at 10:04
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Would this stand a chance to demonstrate Array Rvalue?

int main(){
 int buf[10][10];

 int (*p)[10] = buf;

 int (*p2)[10] = p;      // LValue to Rvalue conversion of Array type 'p'
}
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Nope... p is not array type... it's a pointer to an array. – Tony Delroy Sep 7 '10 at 9:40
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