When I use an initializer list to create a struct, but the initializer list contains fewer elements than my struct, I see the remaining elements are initialized with zeroes.
Is this an undefined behaviour and I'm seeing zeroes because my compiler (VS2015) decided to zero the memory for me?
Or could someone point me to the documentation that explains this behaviour in C++?
This is my code:
struct Thing {
int value;
int* ptr;
};
void main() {
Thing thing { 5 };
std::cout << thing.value << " " << thing.ptr << std::endl;
}
And this is what it prints:
5 00000000
That last element is the one that got zeroed without an initializer.
{ 5 }
sets only the first value5
and the rest0