It will be automatically initialized if
- it's a class/struct instance in which the default constructor initializes all primitive types; like
MyClass instance;
- you use array initializer syntax, e.g.
int a[10] = {}
(all zeroed) or int a[10] = {1,2};
(all zeroed except the first two items: a[0] == 1
and a[1] == 2
)
- same applies to non-aggregate classes/structs, e.g. MyClass instance = {}; (more information on this can be found here)
- it's a global/extern variable
- the variable is defined
static
(no matter if inside a function or in global/namespace scope) - thanks Jerry
Never trust on a variable of a plain type (int, long, ...) being automatically initialized! It might happen in languages like C#, but not in C & C++.
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