- Existing array elements will remain unchanged: yes
- New array elements are initialized to 0: yes (see update)
no, unless it is an array of compiler managed types such as string, an other array or a variant
- All array elements are contiguous in memory: yes
When the array size is increased, the array will be copied. From the doc:
...memory for a dynamic array is reallocated when you assign a value to the array or pass it to the SetLength procedure.
So yes, increasing the size of a dynamic array does have consequences for pointers referencing existing array elements.
If you want to keep references to existing elements, use their index in the array (0-based).
Update
Comments by Rob and David prompted me to check the initialization of dynamic arrays in Delphi5 (as I have that readily available anyway). First using some code to create various types of dynamic arrays and inspecting them in the debugger. They were all properly initialized, but that could still have been a result prior initialization of the memory location where they were allocated. So checked the RTL. It turns out D5 already has the FillChar statement in the DynArraySetLength method that Rob pointed to:
// Set the new memory to all zero bits
FillChar((PChar(p) + elSize * oldLength)^, elSize * (newLength - oldLength), 0);