There are two issues one which is a matter of style and the warning.
Although it may not be obvious, aggregate initialization is happening on a temporary which is then being used as an argument to the copy constructor. The more idiomatic to do this initialization would be as follows:
std::array<int, 10> arr = {};
Although this still leaves the warning.
The warning is covered by gcc bug report: - -Wmissing-field-initializers relaxation request and one of the comments says:
[...]Surely, the C++ syntax of saying MyType x = {}; should be supported,
as seen here:
http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/aggregate_initialization
where for instance:
struct S {
int a;
float b;
std::string str;
};
S s = {}; // identical to S s = {0, 0.0, std::string};
That shouldn't warn for the reasons stated in earlier comments.
and a follow-up comment says:
My statement about zero-initialization was inaccurate (thanks), but
the general point still stands: in C you have to write ' = {0}' since
empty-braces initializer is not supported by the language (you get a
warning with -pedantic); in C++, you can write ' = {}' or 'T foo =
T();', but you don't need to write ' = {0}' specifically.
The latest versions of gcc does not produce this warning for this case, see it live working with gcc 5.1.
We can see this topic also covered in the Clang Developers lists in the thead: -Wmissing-field-initializers.
For reference the draft C++11 standard section 8.5.1
[dcl.init.aggr] says:
If there are fewer initializer-clauses in the list than there are
members in the aggregate, then each member not explicitly initialized
shall be initialized from an empty initializer list (8.5.4). [
Example:
struct S { int a; const char* b; int c; };
S ss = { 1, "asdf" };
initializes ss.a with 1, ss.b with "asdf", and ss.c with the value of
an expression of the form int(), that is, 0. —end example ]
So as this is valid C++, although as noted using {}
is not valid C99. One could argue that it is only a warning, but this seems like idiomatic C++ using {}
for aggregate initialization and is problematic if we are using -Werror
to turn warnings into errors.