Another possible reason why, is that at link-time pointers are given an address, but the indirect addressing/de-referencing a pointer is the responsibility of the programmer. Quite ordinarily, the compiler does not care less, but the burden is passed on to the programmer to manage the pointers and to make sure that no memory leaks occur.
Really, in a nutshell, they are initialized in the sense that at link-time the pointer variable is given an address. In your example code above, that is guaranteed to crash or generate a SIGSEGV.
For the sake of sanity, always initialize pointers to NULL, in that way if any attempt to dereference it without malloc
or new
will clue the programmer into the reason why the program mis-behaved.
Hope this helps and make sense,