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I have a struct of bools.
It contains no other data member but bool.

struct foo {
 bool b1 = false;
 bool b2 = false;
 bool b3 = false;
 // many more ...
};

Without using reflection or code generation,
I'm looking for an easy way to set them all to true, and then set them all to false.

Is it legal everywhere to memset them?

foo f;
memset(&f, true, sizeof f);
memset(&f, false, sizeof f);

As long as I guarantee the data members are always primitives, is this a safe and well-defined operation? If not, are there any other suggestions for ensuring that a large set booleans (more of which may be added in the future), can be consistently all be set to true/false. I would also like to keep them false by default. The reason I want to set them all to true occasionally, is that its useful for unit tests and code coverage.

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    Closely related Is it safe to memset bool to 0? Nov 27, 2018 at 20:30
  • 1
    This is what happens when you choose wrong data structure - that should be a vector of bools.
    – Slava
    Nov 27, 2018 at 20:30
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    @Slava Maybe a std::array of bools instead. vector<bool> can be not fun to play with. Nov 27, 2018 at 20:31
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    @NathanOliver yes or even maybe std::bitset, depends on situation. Point is - struct with a lot of bool is probably the worst choice here.
    – Slava
    Nov 27, 2018 at 20:44
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    std::bitset or flags would be much better. Nov 27, 2018 at 20:45

1 Answer 1

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Because the number of bools is known at compile time you can easily replace these structs with a bitset

struct foo {
    bool b1 = false;
    bool b2 = false;
    bool b3 = false;
};

Can simply become a bitset<3U>. This will allow you to use:

  • set to set all bits to true
  • reset to set all bits to false

The key problem with using memset for the boolean type is that:

The value of sizeof(bool) is implementation defined and might differ from 1

Thus it is implementation defined whether bools will be located at each byte of memory in foo as memset(&f, true, sizeof f) presumes.

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    That's what I'm not sure about. Regardless of a bool's size, wouldn't the bools still be true as long as their values are non-zero? We are memsetting each byte in the struct. So all the bytes related to all the bools will be non-zero. The number of bytes that make up each bool seem unrelated. Nov 28, 2018 at 5:02
  • @TrevorHickey I'll make this a comment because it is purely speculation. Firstly, I believe that even bools must be byte aligned. But I haven't searched the standard to confirm that. If a collection of bools takes less space than 1 the memset doesn't work. Secondly, there is the question of whether false is represented as 0 internally. I don't believe that the standard requires that... Making the memset implementation defined. So again as stated in my answer, I believe the best that can be said of the memset is that it is implementation (universally?) defined. Nov 28, 2018 at 13:29

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