I have a rather idiosyncratic C++14 initialization issue. I'm linking against a C library which provides main()
. That library makes use of a global array that I'm meant to define, something like this:
extern int array[];
int main(void)
{
for (int i = 0; array[i] != -1; i++) {
printf("%d\n", i);
}
}
The expected use is to initialize the array, e.g. int array[] = {1, 2, 3, -1}
. But I want to be able to dynamically initialize it. I'm using C++14, so my thought was to create a global object with a constructor that writes to the array, like this:
int array[2];
struct Init {
Init() {
array[0] = 1;
array[1] = -1;
}
}
Init init;
But the C++14 standard says this:
It is implementation-defined whether the dynamic initialization of a non-local variable with static storage duration is done before the first statement of main. If the initialization is deferred to some point in time after the first statement of main, it shall occur before the first odr-use (3.2) of any function or variable defined in the same translation unit as the variable to be initialized.
Am I reading this correctly that it's possible that when main()
runs, my object won't yet have been constructed, meaning that my array won't be initialized (or rather, will be default initialized, not by my class)?
If so, is there any way around this? I have no control over the library which provides main()
. Am I out of luck in wanting to set the array's value at startup time, before main()
runs?