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I'd like to understand what happens when the size of a dynamic array is increased.

My understanding so far:

  • Existing array elements will remain unchanged.
  • New array elements are initialised to 0
  • All array elements are contiguous in memory.

When the array size is increased, will the extra memory be tacked onto the existing memory block, or will the existing elements be copied to a entirely new memory block?

Does changing the size of a dynamic array have consequences for pointers referencing existing array elements?

Thanks,

[edit] Incorrect assumption struck out. (New array elements are initialised to 0)

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  • The documentation changed on October 26, so your crossed-out item is now correct: "newly allocated space is set to 0 or nil." Nov 19, 2010 at 19:08
  • Question is in which version of Delphi was this introduced? The doc to which @Rob linked is for Delphi XE, but I can see the FillChar call (the one Rob mentioned in his comment to my answer) in the DynArraySetLength procedure of D2009 as well... Nov 19, 2010 at 20:28
  • Newly allocated space has indeed been initialized to 0 or nil zero at least from D5 on (that's what I could readily check). See update to my answer. And probably since the introduction of dynamic arrays as @David commented on my answer. Nov 21, 2010 at 19:46

2 Answers 2

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  • 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);
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  • Thanks Marjan. I need to rethink my double linked list implementation. Nov 19, 2010 at 7:25
  • In current implementations, new array elements are initialized to zero. That's merely an implementation detail, though; there's no guarantee it will continue to work that way, and I'm pretty sure that in older versions, it didn't work that way. Nov 19, 2010 at 17:33
  • @Rob: did you find that in the VCL/RTL? Interested coz if your statement is based on observation, it could be related to your machine. I remember once having an app working fine on one machine and crashing with an AV on another the only difference being the processor and/or the way memory was initialized by the OS... Nov 19, 2010 at 18:55
  • Look for the FillChar call in System.DynArraySetLength. Nov 19, 2010 at 19:05
  • @Rob I'm pretty sure it's always worked that way since dynamic arrays were introduced in D3 or D4. Nov 20, 2010 at 23:44
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In practice Embarcadero will always zero initialise new elements simply because to do otherwise would break so much code.

In fact it's a shame that they don't officially guarantee the zero allocation because it is so useful. The point is that often at the call site when writing SetLength you don't know whether you are growing or shrinking the array. But the implementation of SetLength does know – clearly it has to. So it really makes sense to have a well-defined action on any new elements.

What's more, if they want people to be able to switch easily between managed and native worlds then zero allocation is desirable since that's what fits with the managed code.

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  • In practice Embarcadero will always zero initialise -- Do you know by chance if this is also true for Free Pascal?
    – Wolf
    Oct 19, 2015 at 13:32
  • 1
    I don't, since I don't use Free Pascal. But it should be easy enough to check in their source code. What's more, I'd be astounded if they did not do the same as Delphi since they are motivated to make it easy to write code that works the same in both Delphi and FPC. Oct 19, 2015 at 13:33
  • Thanks for the hint. What I've found in my C:\lazarus\fpc\2.6.4\source\rtl\inc\dynarr.inc (starting at line 137) looks like this. BTW: It was not easy to find, I had to produce a debugger error (SetLength(myArray,-1);) to get SetLength translated into fpc_dynarray_setlength ;-)
    – Wolf
    Oct 19, 2015 at 14:05

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