Is there shortcut to initialize fixed size array with constants. For examle, it I need int array[300]
with 10 in each of 300 spaces, is there trick to avoid writinig 10 300 times?
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econ
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Possible duplicate of [Initialization of a normal array with one default value](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1065774/initialization-of-a-normal-array-with-one-default-value) – Sep 12 '17 at 17:15
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With `std::array`, you could implement something to have that array initialized that way, for C-array, simpler would be to fill it. – Jarod42 Sep 12 '17 at 17:20
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`std::vector
v(300,10);` – Sep 12 '17 at 17:22
2 Answers
8
Here's a compile time solution that uses initialisation (uses std::array
instead of a C array):
template<std::size_t N, typename T, std::size_t... Is>
constexpr std::array<T, N> make_filled_array(
std::index_sequence<Is...>,
T const& value
)
{
return {((void)Is, value)...};
}
template<std::size_t N, typename T>
constexpr std::array<T, N> make_filled_array(T const& value)
{
return make_filled_array<N>(std::make_index_sequence<N>(), value);
}
auto xs = make_filled_array<300, int>(10);
auto ys = make_filled_array<300>(10);

Simple
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You can use std::fill_n
:
int array[300] = {0}; // initialise the array with all 0's
std::fill_n(array, 300, 10); // fill the array with 10's

Phydeaux
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1Note, this doesn't *initialize* a fixed array, it fills via *assignment*. – WhozCraig Sep 12 '17 at 17:09
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It also isn’t `constexpr`, so you can’t use it at compile time to get the same effect. – Daniel H Sep 12 '17 at 17:11