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How to find the size of an int[]? [duplicate]

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-16 03:05 出处:网络
This question already has answers here: How do I find the length of an array? (30 answers) Closed 2 years ago.
This question already has answers here: How do I find the length of an array? (30 answers) Closed 2 years ago.

I have

int list[] = {1, 2, 3};

How to I get the size of list?

I know that for a char array, we can use strlen(array) to find the size, or check with '\0' at the end of the array.


I tried sizeof(array) / sizeof(array[0]) as some answers said, but it only works in main? For example:

int size(in开发者_运维技巧t arr1[]){
    return sizeof(arr1) / sizeof(arr1[0]);
}

int main() {
    int list[] = {1, 2, 3};

    int size1 = sizeof(list) / sizeof(list[0]); // ok
    int size2 = size(list_1); // no
    // size1 and size2 are not the same
}

Why?


Try this:

sizeof(list) / sizeof(list[0]);

Because this question is tagged C++, it is always recommended to use std::vector in C++ rather than using conventional C-style arrays.


An array-type is implicitly converted into a pointer-type when you pass it to a function. Have a look at this.

In order to correctly print the sizeof an array inside any function, pass the array by reference to that function (but you need to know the size of that array in advance).

You would do it like so for the general case

template<typename T,int N> 
//template argument deduction
int size(T (&arr1)[N]) //Passing the array by reference 
{
   return sizeof(arr1)/sizeof(arr1[0]); //Correctly returns the size of 'list'
   // or
   return N; //Correctly returns the size too [cool trick ;-)]
}


The "standard" C way to do this is

sizeof(list) / sizeof(list[0])


You could use boost::size, which is basically defined this way:

template <typename T, std::size_t N>
std::size_t size(T const (&)[N])
{
    return N;
}

Note that if you want to use the size as a constant expression, you'll either have to use the sizeof a / sizeof a[0] idiom or wait for the next version of the C++ standard.


You can't do that for a dynamically allocated array (or a pointer). For static arrays, you can use sizeof(array) to get the whole array size in bytes and divide it by the size of each element:

#define COUNTOF(x) (sizeof(x)/sizeof(*x))

To get the size of a dynamic array, you have to keep track of it manually and pass it around with it, or terminate it with a sentinel value (like '\0' in null terminated strings).

Update: I realized that your question is tagged C++ and not C. You should definitely consider using std::vector instead of arrays in C++ if you want to pass things around:

std::vector<int> v;
v.push_back(1);
v.push_back(2);
std::cout << v.size() << std::endl; // prints 2


Since you've marked this as C++, it's worth mentioning that there is a somewhat better way than the C-style macro:

template <class T, size_t N>
size_t countof(const T &array[N]) { return N; }

This has the advantage that if you accidentally try to pass something other than an array to it, the code simply won't compile (whereas passing a pointer to the C macro will compile but produce a bad result. The disadvantage is that this doesn't give you a compile-time constant, so you can't do something like this:

int a[20];

char x[countof(a)];

In C++11 or newer, you can add constexpr to get a compile-time constant:

template <class T, size_t N>
constexpr size_t countof(const T &array[N]) { return N; }

If you really want to support the same on older compilers, there is a way, originally invented by Ivan Johnson, AFAIK:

#define COUNTOF(x)  (                                           \
  0 * sizeof( reinterpret_cast<const ::Bad_arg_to_COUNTOF*>(x) ) +  \
  0 * sizeof( ::Bad_arg_to_COUNTOF::check_type((x), &(x))      ) +  \
  sizeof(x) / sizeof((x)[0])  )                                  


class Bad_arg_to_COUNTOF
{
public:
   class Is_pointer;
   class Is_array {};  
   template<typename T>
   static Is_pointer check_type(const T*, const T* const*);
   static Is_array check_type(const void*, const void*);
};

This uses sizeof(x)/sizeof(x[0]) to compute the size, just like the C macro does, so it gives a compile-time constant. The difference is that it first uses some template magic to cause a compile error if what you've passed isn't the name of an array. It does that by overloading check_type to return an incomplete type for a pointer, but a complete type for an array. Then (the really tricky part) it doesn't actually call that function at all -- it just takes the size of the type the function would return, which is zero for the overload that returns the complete type, but not allowed (forcing a compile error) for the incomplete type.

IMO, that's a pretty cool example of template meta programming -- though in all honesty, the result is kind of pointless. You really only need that size as a compile time constant if you're using arrays, which you should normally avoid in any case. Using std::vector, it's fine to supply the size at run-time (and resize the vector when/if needed).


Besides Carl's answer, the "standard" C++ way is not to use a C int array, but rather something like a C++ STL std::vector<int> list which you can query for list.size().


when u pass any array to some function. u are just passing it's starting address, so for it to work u have to pass it size also for it to work properly. it's the same reason why we pass argc with argv[] in command line arguement.


You can make a template function, and pass the array by reference to achieve this.

Here is my code snippet

template <typename TypeOfData>


void PrintArray(TypeOfData &arrayOfType);

int main()

{

    char charArray[] = "my name is";

    int intArray[] = { 1,2,3,4,5,6 };

    double doubleArray[] = { 1.1,2.2,3.3 };


    PrintArray(charArray);

    PrintArray(intArray);

    PrintArray(doubleArray);

}


template <typename TypeOfData>

void PrintArray(TypeOfData &arrayOfType)

{

    int elementsCount = sizeof(arrayOfType) / sizeof(arrayOfType[0]);


    for (int i = 0; i < elementsCount; i++)

    {

        cout << "Value in elements at position " << i + 1 << " is " << arrayOfType[i] << endl;

    }

}


You have to use sizeof() function.

Code Snippet:

#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;

int main()
{
      ios::sync_with_stdio(false);

      int arr[] ={5, 3, 6, 7};

      int size = sizeof(arr) / sizeof(arr[0]);
      cout<<size<<endl;

      return 0;
}


int arr1[] = {8, 15, 3, 7};
int n = sizeof(arr1)/sizeof(arr1[0]);

So basically sizeof(arr1) is giving the size of the object being pointed to, each element maybe occupying multiple bits so dividing by the number of bits per element (sizeof(arr1[0]) gives you the actual number of elements you're looking for, i.e. 4 in my example.


This method work when you are using a class: In this example you will receive a array, so the only method that worked for me was these one:

template <typename T, size_t n, size_t m>   
Matrix& operator= (T (&a)[n][m])
{   

    int arows = n;
    int acols = m;

    p = new double*[arows];

    for (register int r = 0; r < arows; r++)
    {
        p[r] = new double[acols];


        for (register int c = 0; c < acols; c++)
        {
            p[r][c] = a[r][c]; //A[rows][columns]
        }

}

https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/how-to-print-size-of-an-array-in-a-function-in-c/


Assuming you merely want to know the size of an array whose type you know (int) but whose size, obviously, you don't know, it is suitable to verify whether the array is empty, otherwise you will end up with a division by zero (causing a Float point exception).

int array_size(int array[]) {
    if(sizeof(array) == 0) {
        return 0;
    }
    return sizeof(array)/sizeof(array[0]);
 }


If you want to know how much numbers the array have, you want to know the array length. The function sizeof(var) in C gives you the bytes in the computer memory. So if you know the memory the int occupy you can do like this:

int arraylength(int array[]) {
    return sizeof(array) / sizeof(int); // Size of the Array divided by the int size
}
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