Is there a way to reset variables declared as static within a function? The goal is to make sure that the function is not called with lingering values from an unrelated call. For example, I have a function opearting on columns of a matrix.
int foo(matrix *A, int colnum, int rownum){
static int whichColumn;
static int *v; //vector of length A->nrows
if (column != whichColumn){
memset(v,0,size);
whichColumn = which;
}
//do other things
}
The function is called n times, once for each column. Is this a proper way of "re-setting" the static variable? Are there other general fool-proof ways of resetting static variables? For example, I want to make sure that if the call is made with a new matrix with possibly different dimensions then the vector v is resized and zeroed etc. It seems the easiest way may be to call the function with a NULL pointer:
int foo(matrix *A, int colnum, int rownum){
static int whichColumn;
static int *v; //vector of length A->nrows
if (A == NULL){
FREE(v);
whichColumn = 0;
}
//do other things
}
Use an idempotent initializer function and global variables instead.
For example:
int foo;
int *m = NULL;
static void InitVars() {
foo = 0;
if (m != NULL) {
free(m);
}
m = malloc(sizeof(int)*5);
memset(m, 0, sizeof(int)*5);
}
If your initializer is really idempotent, you can call it again to reset the variables.
If you need this to be called automagically, use __attribute__((constructor))
(for GCC) like so:
static void InitVars __attribute__((constructor)) ();
However, you should note that if you need to do this, you should reconsider using in-function static
variables and instead use passed-in fresh ones that are returned/written and passed to subsequent related calls.