So I always heard that class fields (heap based) were initialized, but stack based variables were not. I also heard that record members (also being stack based) were also not initialized. The compiler warns that local variables are not initialized ([DCC Warning] W1036 Variable 'x' might not have been initialized), but does not warn for record members. So I decided to run a test.
I always get 0 from Integers and false from Booleans for all record members.
I tried turning various compiler options (debugging, optimizations, etc.) on and off, but there was no difference. All my record members are being initialized.
What am I missing? I am on Delphi 2009 Update 2.
program TestInitialization;
{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}
uses
SysUtils;
type
TR = Record
Public
i1, i2, i3, i4, i5: Integer;
a: array[0..10] of Integer;
b1, b2, b3, b4, b5: Boolean;
s: String;
End;
var
r: TR;
x: Integer;
begin
try
WriteLn('Testing record. . . .');
WriteLn('i1 ',R.i1);
WriteLn('i2 ',R.i2);
WriteLn('i3 ',R.i3);
WriteLn('i4 ',R.i4);
WriteLn('i5 ',R.i5);
Writeln('S ',R.s);
Writeln('Booleans: ', R.b1, ' ', R.b2, ' ', R.b3, ' ', R.b4, ' ', R.b5);
Writeln('Array ');
for x := 0 to 10 do
Write(R.a[x], ' ');
WriteLn;
WriteLn('Done . . . .');
except
on E:Exception do
Writeln(E.Classname, ': ', E.Message);
end;
ReadLn;
end.
Output:
Testing record. . . . i1 0 i2 0 i3 0 i4 0 i5 0 S Booleans: FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE Array 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Done . . . .
Global variables are zero-initialized. Variables used in the context of the main begin
..end
block of a program can be a special case; sometimes they are treated as local variables, particularly for
-loop indexers. However, in your example, r
is a global variable and allocated from the .bss section of the executable, which the Windows loader ensures is zero-filled.
Local variables are initialized as if they were passed to the Initialize
routine. The Initialize
routine uses runtime type-info (RTTI) to zero-out fields (recursively - if a field is of an array or record type) and arrays (recursively - if the element type is an array or a record) of a managed type, where a managed type is one of:
Allocations from the heap are not necessarily initialized; it depends on what mechanism was used to allocate memory. Allocations as part of instance object data are zero-filled by TObject.InitInstance
. Allocations from AllocMem
are zero-filled, while GetMem
allocations are not zero-filled. Allocations from New
are initialized as if they were passed to Initialize
.