Reputation: 210755
What is the default value of a function pointer in C++? (Apparently it can't be NULL
, so what is it?)
How is this program supposed to behave and why?
struct S { void (*f)(); };
int main()
{
S s = S();
s.f(); // What is the value of s.f?
}
Upvotes: 6
Views: 8010
Reputation: 66254
First any pointer can be null. It is the one universal truth about pointers. That said, yours will be null, but not necessarily for the reasons you may think;
C++11 § 8.5,p10
An object whose initializer is an empty set of parentheses, i.e., (), shall be value-initialized.
This is important because your declaration includes this :
S s = S();
By the definition of value initialization:
C++11 § 8.5,p7
To value-initialize an object of type T means:
if T is a (possibly cv-qualified) class type (Clause 9) with a user-provided constructor (12.1), then the default constructor for T is called (and the initialization is ill-formed if T has no accessible default constructor);
if T is a (possibly cv-qualified) non-union class type without a user-provided constructor, then the object is zero-initialized and, if T’s implicitly-declared default constructor is non-trivial, that constructor is called.
if T is an array type, then each element is value-initialized;
otherwise, the object is zero-initialized.
Which brings us to what it means for your object-type to be zero-initialized:
C++11 § 8.5,p5
To zero-initialize an object or reference of type T means:
if T is a scalar type (3.9), the object is set to the value 0 (zero), taken as an integral constant expression, converted to T (103)
if T is a (possibly cv-qualified) non-union class type, each non-static data member and each base-class subobject is zero-initialized and padding is initialized to zero bits;
if T is a (possibly cv-qualified) union type, the object’s first non-static named data member is zero- initialized and padding is initialized to zero bits;
if T is an array type, each element is zero-initialized;
if T is a reference type, no initialization is performed.
103) As specified in 4.10, converting an integral constant expression whose value is 0 to a pointer type results in a null pointer value.
The latter is the reason you're pointer is null. It will not be guaranteed-so by the standard given the same code, but changing the declaration of s
to this:
S s;
Given a declaration like the above, a different path is taken through the standard:
C++11 § 8.5,p11
If no initializer is specified for an object, the object is default-initialized; if no initialization is performed, an object with automatic or dynamic storage duration has indeterminate value. [ Note: Objects with static or thread storage duration are zero-initialized, see 3.6.2.
Which then begs the last question, what is default initialization:
C++11 § 8.5,p6
To default-initialize an object of type T means:
if T is a (possibly cv-qualified) class type (Clause 9), the default constructor for T is called (and the initialization is ill-formed if T has no accessible default constructor);
if T is an array type, each element is default-initialized;
otherwise, no initialization is performed.
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 62532
Function pointer can be NULL, this way you can indicate that they don't point to anything!
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 4207
In C++ (and C), pointers (regardless of type) do not have a default value per se; they take what ever happens to be in memory at the time. However, they do have a default initialised value of NULL
.
When you don't explicitly define a constructor, C++ will call the default initialiser on each member variable, which will initialise pointers to 0
. However, if you define a constructor, but do not set the value for a pointer, it does not have a default value. The behaviour is the same for integers, floats and doubles.
Aside
int main()
{
S s = S();
s.f(); // <-- This is calling `f`, not getting the pointer value.
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 71009
A function pointer can be NULL and you may assign NULL to it. Have a look here for instance:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
struct S { void (*f)(); };
int main()
{
S s = S();
s.f = NULL;
return 0;
}
I believe the way you call the constructor of the structure(with ()
), f will be NULL.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 361762
In your case the object s
is zero-initialized which means the function pointer is NULL
.
struct S { void (*f)(); };
int main()
{
S s = S();
if ( s.f == NULL)
std::cout << "s.f is NULL" << std::endl;
}
Output:
s.f is NULL
Upvotes: 8