c++ sizeof( string )

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陌清茗
陌清茗 2020-12-09 13:59
#include 
#include 

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
   cout << "size of String " << sizeof( string );
               


        
8条回答
  •  我在风中等你
    2020-12-09 14:42

    sizeof(char) is always 1 byte. A byte which we think is 8-bits need not be the case. There are architectures where a BYTE is 32-bits, 24-bits and so on. The sizeof applied to any other type is in multiples of sizeof(char) which is by definition 1.

    The next important thing to note is that C++ has three character types: plain char, signed char and unsigned char. A plain char is either signed or unsigned. So it is wrong to assume that char can have only values from 0 to 255. This is true only when a char is 8-bits, and plain char is unsigned.

    Having said, that assuming that 'string' is 'std::namespace', sizeof(string) == 4 means that the sizeof the 'std::string' class is 4 bytes. It occupies 4 times the number of bytes that a 'char' on that machine takes. Note that signed T, unsigned T always have the same size. It does not mean that the actual buffer of characters (which is called string in common parlance) is only 4 bytes. Inside the 'std::string' class, there is a non static member pointer which is allocated dynamically to hold the input buffer. This can have as many elements as the system allows (C++ places no restriction on this length). But since the 'std::string' class only holds the pointer to this potentially infite length buffer, the sizeof(std::string) always remains the same as sizeof pointer on the given architecture which on your system is 4.

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