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Comments on How allocated memory is calculated?

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How allocated memory is calculated?

+5
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int arr[] = {10,123,14,14,15,16};
cout<<sizeof(arr)/sizeof(arr[0]);

I was reading the article.

When sizeof() is used with the data types such as int, float, char… etc it simply returns the amount of memory is allocated to that data types.

How the memory is calculated? Is there any equation to find that without any code?

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The size of the "primitive data types" int, float etc is not defined by the standard. In practice, int is either 16 or 32 bits on all known systems.

Because of the unspecified size leading to poor portability of the primitive types, the stdint.h library was introduced back in 1999, containing fixed width types that are portable. uint32_t etc. These are the preferred types in professional settings where portability matters.

In your specific case, if we assume a 32 bit system then each int is 4 bytes. The array is then 4x6 = 24 bytes large.

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1 comment thread

How does C figure the bitness of the system? (2 comments)
How does C figure the bitness of the system?
Quasímodo‭ wrote about 3 years ago

Can you expand on how C figures out the bitness of the system?

Lundin‭ wrote about 3 years ago

Quasímodo‭ The programmers who make the compiler port to that specific system sets it up.