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Each data type has a size, which is the number of bytes
(see Storage and Data) that it occupies in memory. To refer to the size in
a C program, use sizeof
. There are two ways to use it:
sizeof expression
This gives the size of expression, based on its data type. It
does not calculate the value of expression, only its size, so if
expression includes side effects or function calls, they do not
happen. Therefore, sizeof
is always a compile-time operation
that has zero run-time cost.
A value that is a bit field (see Bit Fields) is not allowed as an
operand of sizeof
.
For example,
double a; i = sizeof a + 10;
sets i
to 18 on most computers because a
occupies 8 bytes.
Here’s how to determine the number of elements in an array
array
:
(sizeof array / sizeof array[0])
The expression sizeof array
gives the size of the array, not
the size of a pointer to an element. However, if expression is
a function parameter that was declared as an array, that
variable really has a pointer type (see Array parameters are pointers), so
the result is the size of that pointer.
sizeof (type)
This gives the size of type. For example,
i = sizeof (double) + 10;
is equivalent to the previous example.
You can’t apply sizeof
to an incomplete type (see Incomplete Types), nor void
. Using it on a function type gives 1 in GNU
C, which makes adding an integer to a function pointer work as desired
(see Pointer Arithmetic).
Warning: When you use sizeof
with a type
instead of an expression, you must write parentheses around the type.
Warning: When applying sizeof
to the result of a cast
(see Explicit Type Conversion), you must write parentheses around
the cast expression to avoid an ambiguity in the grammar of C.
Specifically,
sizeof (int) -x
parses as
(sizeof (int)) - x
If what you want is
sizeof ((int) -x)
you must write it that way, with parentheses.
The data type of the value of the sizeof
operator is always one
of the unsigned integer types; which one of those types depends on the
machine. The header file stddef.h
defines the typedef name
size_t
as an alias for this type. See Defining Typedef Names.
Next: Pointers, Previous: Constants, Up: GNU C Manual [Contents][Index]