In computer programming, a variable-length array (VLA), also called variable-sized or runtime-sized, is an array data structure whose length is determined at run time (instead of at compile time).[1] In C, the VLA is said to have a variably modified type that depends on a value (see Dependent type).
The main purpose of VLAs is to simplify programming of numerical algorithms.
Programming languages that support VLAs include Ada, Algol 68 (for non-flexible rows), APL, C99 (although subsequently relegated in C11 to a conditional feature, which implementations are not required to support;[2][3] on some platforms, could be implemented previously with alloca()
or similar functions) and C# (as unsafe-mode stack-allocated arrays), COBOL, Fortran 90, J, and Object Pascal (the language used in Borland Delphi and Lazarus, that uses FPC).
The following C99 function allocates a variable-length array of a specified size, fills it with floating-point values, and then passes it to another function for processing. Because the array is declared as an automatic variable, its lifetime ends when read_and_process()
returns.
float read_and_process(int n)
{
float vals[n];
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
vals[i] = read_val();
return process(n, vals);
}
In C99, the length parameter must come before the variable-length array parameter in function calls.[1] In C11, a __STDC_NO_VLA__
macro is defined if VLA is not supported.[5] GCC had VLA as an extension before C99.
Linus Torvalds has expressed his displeasure in the past over VLA usage for arrays with predetermined small sizes because it generates lower quality assembly code. [6] With the Linux 4.20 kernel, Linux kernel is effectively VLA-free.[7]
Although C11 does not explicitly name a size-limit for VLAs, some readings believe it should have the same maximum size as all other objects, i.e. SIZE_MAX bytes.[8] However, this reading should be understood in the wider context of environment and platform limits, such as the typical stack-guard page size of 4 KiB, which is many orders of magnitude smaller than SIZE_MAX.
The following is the same example in Ada. Ada arrays carry their bounds with them, so there is no need to pass the length to the Process function.
type Vals_Type is array (Positive range <>) of Float;
function Read_And_Process (N : Integer) return Float is
Vals : Vals_Type (1 .. N);
begin
for I in 1 .. N loop
Vals (I) := Read_Val;
end loop;
return Process (Vals);
end Read_And_Process;
The equivalent Fortran 90 function is
function read_and_process(n) result(o)
integer,intent(in)::n
real::o
real,dimension(n)::vals
integer::i
do i = 1,n
vals(i) = read_val()
end do
o = process(vals)
end function read_and_process
when utilizing the Fortran 90 feature of checking procedure interfaces at compile time; on the other hand, if the functions use pre-Fortran 90 call interface, the (external) functions must first be declared, and the array length must be explicitly passed as an argument (as in C):
function read_and_process(n) result(o)
integer,intent(in)::n
real::o
real,dimension(n)::vals
real::read_val, process
integer::i
do i = 1,n
vals(i) = read_val()
end do
o = process(vals,n)
end function read_and_process
The following COBOL fragment declares a variable-length array of records DEPT-PERSON
having a length (number of members) specified by the value of PEOPLE-CNT
:
DATA DIVISION.
WORKING-STORAGE SECTION.
01 DEPT-PEOPLE.
05 PEOPLE-CNT PIC S9(4) BINARY.
05 DEPT-PERSON OCCURS 0 TO 20 TIMES DEPENDING ON PEOPLE-CNT.
10 PERSON-NAME PIC X(20).
10 PERSON-WAGE PIC S9(7)V99 PACKED-DECIMAL.
The COBOL VLA, unlike that of other languages mentioned here, is safe because COBOL requires one to specify the maximal array size – in this example, DEPT-PERSON
cannot have more than 20 items, regardless of the value of PEOPLE-CNT
.
The following C# fragment declares a variable-length array of integers. Prior to C# version 7.2, a pointer to the array is required, requiring an "unsafe" context. The "unsafe" keyword requires an assembly containing this code to be marked as unsafe.
unsafe void DeclareStackBasedArrayUnsafe(int size)
{
int *pArray = stackalloc int[size];
pArray[0] = 123;
}
C# version 7.2 and later allow the array to be allocated without the "unsafe" keyword, through the use of the Span feature.[9]
void DeclareStackBasedArraySafe(int size)
{
Span<int> stackArray = stackalloc int[size];
stackArray[0] = 123;
}
In this language, it is called a dynamic array. The declaration of such a variable is similar to the declaration of a static array, but without specifying its size. The size of the array is given at the time of its use.
program CreateDynamicArrayOfNumbers(Size: Integer);
var
NumberArray: array of LongWord;
begin
SetLength(NumberArray, Size);
NumberArray[0] := 2020;
end.
Removing the contents of a dynamic array is done by assigning it a size of zero.
...
SetLength(NumberArray, 0);
...
By: Wikipedia.org
Edited: 2021-06-18 15:15:22
Source: Wikipedia.org