I am getting into C/C++ and a lot of terms are popping up unfamiliar to me. One of them is a variable or pointer that is terminated by a zero. What does it mean for a space
There are two common ways to handle arrays that can have varying-length contents (like Strings). The first is to separately keep the length of the data stored in the array. Languages like Fortran and Ada and C++'s std::string do this. The disadvantage to doing this is that you somehow have to pass that extra information to everything that is dealing with your array.
The other way, is to reserve an extra non-data element at the end of the array to serve as a sentinel. For the sentinel you use a value that should never appear in the actual data. For strings, 0 (or "NUL") is a good choice, as that is unprintable and serves no other purpose in ASCII. So what C (and many languages copied from C) do is to assume that all strings end (or "are terminated by") a 0.
There are several drawbacks to this. For one thing, it is slow. Any time a routine needs to know the length of the string, it is an O(n) operation (searching through the entire string looking for the 0). Another problem is that you may one day want to put a 0 in your string for some reason, so now you need a whole second set of string routines that ignore the null and use a separate length anyway (eg: strnlen() ). The third big problem is that if someone forgets to put that 0 at the end (or it gets wiped out somehow), the next string operation to do a lenth check will go merrily marching through memory until it either happens to randomly find another 0, crashes, or the user loses patience and kills it. Such bugs can be a serious PITA to track down.
For all these reasons, the C approach is generally viewed with disfavor.