Related but not quite duplicate as it discusses C++:
can we give size of static array a variable
I am defining an array in one of the child files as follows.
static int arr[siz];
Here siz
is a global variable available to the child file. But the gcc compiler produces the following error :
<filename>: <line_num> : error : storage size of ‘arr’ isn’t constant
Why can't I define a static
array of variable size ?
EDIT : This seems to be a problem only for static int
type. If I change the variable type of arr
from static int
to int
, the error goes away, even though the size of array is still dependent on a variable siz
.
Since the size of the array you declare is not constant, what you have is an Variable Length Array(VLA). VLA are allowed by the c99 standard but there are some limitations associated with it. You cannot have an variable length array with static
or extern
storage class specifier.
You have an VLA with static
storage specification and it is not allowed by the C99 Standard.
Reference:
c99 Standard: 6.7.5.2/8
EXAMPLE 4 All declarations of variably modified (VM) types have to be at either block scope or
function prototype scope. Array objects declared with the static or extern storage class specifier cannot have a variable length array (VLA) type. However, an object declared with the static storage class specifier can have a VM type (that is, a pointer to a VLA type). Finally, all identifiers declared with a VM type have to be ordinary identifiers and cannot, therefore, be members of structures or unions.
So if you want a dynamic size array with static
storage specifier you will have to use a dynamic array allocated on heap.
#define MAX_SIZE 256
static int* gArr;
gArr = malloc(MAX_SIZE * sizeof(int));
EDIT:
To answer your updated question:
When you remove the static
keyword from the declaration, the storage specifier of the declared array changes from static
to global, note the standard quote above, it clearly mentions the restriction that VLAs are not allowed with static
and extern
storage specification. Clearly, you are allowed to have an VLA with global storage specification, which is what you have once you remove the static
keyword.
You are allocating the array at compile-time, so the compiler has to know the array's size in advance. You have to declare siz
as a constant expression before you declare arr
, for instance:
#define siz 5
or
enum ESizes
{
siz = 5
};
Alternatively, if you need to determine its size in run-time, you can allocate it on the heap by using malloc
:
static int* arr;
arr = (int*)malloc(siz * sizeof(int))
EDIT: as eddieantonio has mentioned, my answer is valid for C89. In C99 it is allowed to declare arrays of variable size.
You can't define any array of variable size. That's because arr[siz]
makes the compiler (!) allocate memory for your array (well, the compiler creates a program, that .., but let's not stray into details). However, variables can be changed at runtime (!) which means the compiler has no chance of knowing how much memory to allocate.
What you can do is
static int* arr;
arr = (int*) calloc(siz,sizeof(int))
These lines result in a program that allocates memory at runtime, therefore it's exact size may be defined at runtime as well.
You cannot declare a static
array of variable size because its space is allocated in the Data Segment (or bss segment in case of an uninitialized variable). Hence the compiler needs to know the size at the compile time and will complain if the size is not a constant.
The underlying reason for this is the Data Segment size contributes to the size of the executable being generated, which obviously is created at compile time, and hence has to be fixed.