I want to create a simple structure that holds an identifier of type int
and a value of any kind. Should I use
str开发者_开发知识库uct {
int key;
void *value;
}
or
struct {
int key;
void **value;
}
or something else?
I would use the first since a void*
can point to anything. There doesn't appear to be any need for a double indirection in your case.
You should also keep in mind that there is another way, one that involves having a variable size payload within the structure rather than a fixed void*
. It's useful in the case where the structures themselves are allocated (such as in a linked list) so you can make them variable sized by adjusting the argument to malloc
.
In that case, you can avoid pointers in the structure altogether. See this answer for more details. I'm not suggesting that it's necessary (or even a good idea) for this particular case, just providing it as another possibility. I suspect your option 1 will be more than enough, or supplying a union within the structure if you don't want any pointer in there.
I think You have to use a combination of union and struct:
struct my_struct {
int key;
union {
int a_int;
float a_float;
char a_char;
/* Other types You may need */
} value;
}
The pointer only points to a variable, it doesn't hold its value. You have to store actual variable somewhere else.
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