As per Why malloc+memset is slower than calloc?
malloc
+memset
is slower than calloc
under certain conditions.
Why wasn't calloc
written in such a way that it can take an extra value
argument ( like memset
) to override default assignment by zero? What would have been the effect of that if it were done?
These calloc
or memset
initializations operate on a byte level, so even memset
with a value different from 0
is not that usefull. At least I don't remember having it used with different values. Mostly you allocate memory for a base type that is wider than char
.
The other aspect is that calloc
is initialization and not assignment. Platforms may have builtins that provide a fast initialization of all bytes to 0
, you wouldn't capture this when passing an argument to initialize.
But probably the most important aspect is that this is history of C. These interfaces originate from the very beginning and are impossible to change.