As mentioned by others, what happens is the zero initialization kicks in. I actually use that a lot in my code (outside of vectors and other classes):
some_type my_var = some_type();
This allows me to make sure that my variables are always properly initialized since by default C/C++ do not initialize basic types (char, short, int, long, float, double, etc.)
Since C++11, you also can do so in your class definitions:
class MyClass
{
...
int my_field_ = 123; // explicit initialization
int your_field_ = int(); // zero initialization
};
For vectors, the std library uses T()
. Whatever T()
is, it will use that default initialization. For a class, it calls the default constructor. For a basic type, it uses zero ('\0'
, 0,
0.0f,
0.0,
nullptr`).
As mentioned by James McNellis and Nawaz, it is possible to set the value used to initialize the vector as in:
std::vector<int> foo(100, 1234);
That feature is also available when you resize your vector (if the vector shrinks, the default value is ignored):
foo.resize(200, 1234);
So that way you can have a default initialization value. However, it's a be tricky since you have to make sure that all your definitions and resize()
calls use that default value. That's when you want to write your own class which ensures that the default value is always passed to the vector functions.
However, if you want to have a way to auto-initialize to a specific value, you can mix both features this way:
struct my_value {
int v = 123;
};
std::vector<my_value> foo(100);
// here foo[n].v == 123 for n in [0, 100)
This is my preferred way of dealing with this issue (i.e. if I don't want zero by default). It's an extra .v
, but much less prone to mistakes and you don't need to know of the default value when you create a vector of my_value
.
Also, for those who think this will be slow, it won't. The struct is like syntactic sugar as far as C++ is concerned. One optimized, it will be exactly the same as a simple std::vector<int> foo(100, 123)
.