A very common advice/belief most newbies are taught:
When you declare a string, its length should be one more than the maximum number of characters it's supposed to hold.
Sounds perfectly reasonable — strings are terminated with an extra NULL character. However, now that I've grown in programming, it seems to me that it is not so right after all.
Let's say I want to create an integer array
Arr
that can holdx
number of elements. The index value ofArr
's last element will be one less thanx
since index values start from0
and not1
. So, its length isx-1
.
— Why should string length be plus one its capacity in C?
So this is how it gets declared: int Arr[x-1]
.
Now if
Arr
were achar
type array (i.e. a string), the length ofArr
would be one more than that of itsint
counterpart since it has an extra NULL character at the end.
— Why should string length be plus one its capacity in C?
With a little bit of arithmetic, you can work out the string length to be (x-1)+1=x
.
Code to demonstrate this
So why does the declaration this time has to bechar Arr[x+1]
and not simplychar Arr[x]
?
— Why should string length be plus one its capacity in C?
I did hours of research using Internet and managed to come up with a suitable explanation and code to back up my claim. I posted a question on this because I still had my doubts. (Much of the explanation here has been quoted from that question.) It was very ill-received and initially many of the users were misunderstanding my point.
Maybe my question wasn't clearly worded or my claim is invalid.
Either ways, it doesn't explain why the answers and comments failed to understand/address the purpose of my question which is to ask why a given statement is valid.
This leads to the ultimate question:
Are questions questioning the validity of a widespread advice unwelcome on SO?
int Arr[x-1]
. Try to storex
integers in it. The resulting out of bounds error/exception would have been enough to answer your question.