Declaring an array of negative length

What happens in C when you create an array of negative length?

For instance:

int n = -35;

int testArray[n];

for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
    testArray[i]=i+1;

This code will compile (and brings up no warnings with -Wall enabled), and it seems you can assign to testArray[0] without issue. Assigning past that gives either a segfault or illegal instruction error, and reading anything from the array says "Abort trap" (I'm not familiar with that one). I realize this is somewhat academic, and would (hopefully) never come up in real life, but is there any particular way that the C standard says to treat such arrays, or is does it vary from compiler to compiler?


It's undefined behaviour, because it breaks a "shall" constraint:

C99 §6.7.5.2:

If the size is an expression that is not an integer constant expression... ...each time it is evaluated it shall have a value greater than zero.


Undefined behavior, I believe, though don't quote me on that.

This gives the error error: size of array 'testArray' is negative in gcc:

int testArray[-35];

though, as you've seen:

int n = -35;
int testArray[n];

does not give an error even with both -Wall and -W.

However, if you use -pedantic flag, gcc will warn that ISO C90 forbids variable length array.