At compile time, the sizeof operator returns the amount of memory required to hold an object whose type is type-id or the type of unary-expr. In the latter case, unary-expr is not evaluated. The size of a type includes any padding that the compiler adds to it, so the size of an array of N elements is always equal to N times the size of a single element. By definition, sizeof(char) is 1, so you can think of the size of other types as multiples of the size of a character. The expression type is std::size_t. Exampleclass point { ... }; point* p = malloc(sizeof(point)); point corners[] = { { 2, 4 }, {4, 2}, ..., { 42, 10 } }; const unsigned count = sizeof(corners) / sizeof(corners[0]); See Alsoexpression, type, Chapter 3, <cstdlib> |