cppcoreguidelines-init-variables¶
Checks whether there are local variables that are declared without an initial value. These may lead to unexpected behavior if there is a code path that reads the variable before assigning to it.
This rule is part of the Type safety (Type.5) profile and ES.20 from the C++ Core Guidelines.
Only integers, booleans, floats, doubles and pointers are checked. The fix option initializes all detected values with the value of zero. An exception is float and double types, which are initialized to NaN.
As an example a function that looks like this:
void function() {
int x;
char *txt;
double d;
// Rest of the function.
}
Would be rewritten to look like this:
#include <math.h>
void function() {
int x = 0;
char *txt = nullptr;
double d = NAN;
// Rest of the function.
}
It warns for the uninitialized enum case, but without a FixIt:
enum A {A1, A2, A3};
enum A_c : char { A_c1, A_c2, A_c3 };
enum class B { B1, B2, B3 };
enum class B_i : int { B_i1, B_i2, B_i3 };
void function() {
A a; // Warning: variable 'a' is not initialized
A_c a_c; // Warning: variable 'a_c' is not initialized
B b; // Warning: variable 'b' is not initialized
B_i b_i; // Warning: variable 'b_i' is not initialized
}
Options¶
- IncludeStyle¶
A string specifying which include-style is used, llvm or google. Default is llvm.
- MathHeader¶
A string specifying the header to include to get the definition of NAN. Default is <math.h>.