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c - What is the rationale for one past the last element of an array object?

According to N1570 (C11 draft) 6.5.6/8 Additive operators:

Moreover, if the expression P points to the last element of an array object, the expression (P)+1 points one past the last element of the array object, and if the expression Q points one past the last element of an array object, the expression (Q)-1 points to the last element of the array object

Subclause 6.5.6/9 also contains:

Moreover, if the expression P points either to an element of an array object or one past the last element of an array object, and the expression Q points to the last element of the same array object, the expression ((Q)+1)-(P) has the same value as ((Q)-(P))+1 and as -((P)-((Q)+1)), and has the value zero if the expression P points one past the last element of the array object, even though the expression (Q)+1 does not point to an element of the array object.106)

This justifies pointer's arithmetic like this to be valid:

#include <stdio.h>

int main(void)
{
    int a[3] = {0, 1, 2};
    int *P, *Q;

    P = a + 3; // one past the last element
    Q = a + 2; // last element

    printf("%td
", ((Q)+1)-(P));
    printf("%td
", ((Q)-(P))+1);
    printf("%td
", -((P)-((Q)+1)));

    return 0;
}

I would expect to disallow pointing to element of array out-of-bounds, for which dereference acts as undefined behaviour (array overrun), thus it makes it potentially dangerous. Is there any rationale for this?

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Specifying the range to loop over as the half-closed interval [start, end), especially for array indices, has certain pleasing properties as Dijkstra observed in one of his notes.

1) You can compute the size of the range as a simple function of end - start. In particular, if the range is specified in terms of array indices, the number of iterations performed by the loop would be given by end - start. If the range was [start, end], then the number of iterations would have been end - start + 1 - very annoying, isn't it? :)

2) Dijsktra's second observation applies only to the case of (non-negative) integral indices - specifying a range as [start, end) and (start, end] both have the property mentioned in 1). However, specifying it as (start, end] requires you to allow an index of -1 to represent a loop range including the index 0 - you are allowing an "unnatural" value of -1 just for the sake of representing the range. The [start, end) convention does not have this issue, because end is a non-negative integer, and hence a natural choice when dealing with array indices.

Dijsktra's objection to allowing -1 does have similarities to allowing one past the last valid address of the container. However, since the above convention has been in use for so long, it likely persuaded the standards committee to make this exception.


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