As far as I know, the C compiler (I am using GCC 6) will scan the code in order to:
- Finding syntax issues;
- Allocating memory to the program (Static allocation concept);
So why does this code work?
int main(){
int integers_amount; // each int has 4 bytes
printf("How many intergers do you wanna store? \n");
scanf("%d", &integers_amount);
int array[integers_amount];
printf("Size of array: %d\n", sizeof(array)); // Should be 4 times integer_amount
for(int i = 0; i < integers_amount; i++){
int integer;
printf("Type the integer: \n");
scanf("%d", &integer);
array[i] = integer;
}
for(int j = 0; j < integers_amount; j++){
printf("Integer typed: %d \n", array[j]);
}
return 0;
}
My point is:
How does the C compiler infer the size of the array during compilation time?
I mean, it was declared but its value has not been informed just yet (Compilation time). I really believed that the compiler allocated the needed amount of memory (in bytes) at compilation time - That is the concept of static allocation matter of fact.
From what I could see, the allocation for the variable 'array' is done during runtime, only after the user has informed the 'size' of the array. Is that correct?
I thought that dynamic allocation was used to use the needed memory only (let's say that I declare an integer array of size 10 because I don't know how many values the user will need to hold there, but I ended up only using 7, so I have a waste of 12 bytes).
If during runtime I have those bytes informed I can allocate only the memory needed. However, it doesn't seem to be the case because from the code we can see that the array is only allocated during runtime.
Can I have some help understanding that?
Thanks in advance.