const int ARRAY_LENGTH = 5; int MyNumbers [ARRAY_LENGTH] = {34, 56, -21, 5002, 365};
Arrays declared this far are called static arrays as the length of the array is fixed by the programmer at compile-time. This array cannot take more data than what the programmer has specified. It also does not consume any less memory if left half-used or unused.
but I can use it as dynamic so array initiliazing can change on runtime like
int main() { int num; cout << "Your number:"<<endl; cin >> num; int dizi[num]; return 0; }
There recently was a discussion about this kicked off in usenet: Why no VLAs in C++0x.
I agree with those people that seem to agree that having to create a potential large array on the stack, which usually has only little space available, isn't good. The argument is, if you know the size before...
ok my question is: that variable "num" can change at runtime right? so i can change give that number to my array up to user options. so that means my array can initilase as dynamic at runtime right?
but book says you cant, says :
Arrays declared this far are called static arrays as the length of the array is fixed by the programmer at compile-time. This array cannot take more data than what the programmer has specified. It also does not consume any less memory if left half-used or unused.
@mekici Precisely. The linked answer explains that in-depth. You are using a nonstandard extension. If you insist, you could disable that using a compiler flag (-fpedantic should work, I guess)
> The particular standard is used by -pedantic to identify which features are GNU extensions given that version of the standard. For example -std=gnu90 -pedantic would warn about C++ style // comments, while -std=gnu99 -pedantic would not.
@mekici Yeah i remember seeing it somewhere in the flags (large list box with checboxes) as well. I hate IDEs for that reason: I rather type / paste actual commands
@mekici Can't you just 'not use VLAs' now that you know why it is being accepted? IME the MSVC compiler is a lot more restrictive. MSVC++ Express 2010 is free for download