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I am trying to sort array of structs using qsort() but frustratingly, it's not working. I have read the manpage for qsort() and I think I have the comparator function that syntactically looks okay, but when I print the "sorted" array after calling qsort(), nothing is sorted in my array.

The code:

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>

#define ARRAY_SZ 5

typedef struct SingleChar
{
    unsigned char Character;
    unsigned int Weight;
} *SingleCharPtr;

int CompareWeights(const void *a, const void *b)
{
    const SingleCharPtr p1 = (SingleCharPtr)a;
    const SingleCharPtr p2 = (SingleCharPtr)b;

    // printf("Weight1: %u\tWeight2: %u\n", p1->Weight, p2->Weight);
    // return (p1->Weight - p2->Weight);

    if (p1->Weight < p2->Weight)
        return -1;
    else if (p1->Weight > p2->Weight)
        return 1;
    else
        return 0;
}


SingleCharPtr MakeChar(unsigned char c, unsigned int w)
{
    SingleCharPtr scptr = malloc(sizeof(struct SingleChar));

    if (!scptr)
    {
        fprintf(stderr, "[Error] Out of memory\n");
        exit(1);
    }

    scptr->Character = c;
    scptr->Weight = w;

    return scptr;
}

int main(void)
{
    SingleCharPtr *chars = malloc(ARRAY_SZ * sizeof(SingleCharPtr));

    chars[0] = MakeChar('B', 3);
    chars[1] = MakeChar('E', 7);
    chars[2] = MakeChar('A', 4);
    chars[3] = MakeChar('D', 6);
    chars[4] = MakeChar('C', 2);

    qsort(chars, ARRAY_SZ, sizeof(SingleCharPtr), &CompareWeights);

    int i;
    for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SZ; i++)
    {
        printf("Character: %c\tWeight: %u\n", chars[i]->Character, chars[i]->Weight);
        free(chars[i]);
    }

    free(chars);

    return 0;
}

Also, in the comparator function (CompareWeights()), I found out that when I print the weight of the structs pointed by SingleCharPtr, I get 0s for all of them.

Any pointer to right direction would be highly appreciated.

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  • Please don't post links to or screenshots of the code. Paste it here and format it.
    – user529758
    Jul 22, 2013 at 8:22

2 Answers 2

1

The problem: qsort() passes in pointers to the elements to be compared to the comparator function, and not the elements themselves. So, the arguments to your CompareWeights() function are actually const SingleCharPtr *, disguised as const void *. What you should do in that function is:

const SingleCharPtr p1 = *(const SingleCharPtr *)a;

etc.


Sidenotes:

I. If your assumption had been valid, then you wouldn't have needed the cast:

const SingleCharPtr p1 = a;

is preferred over

const SingleCharPtr p1 = (SingleCharPtr)a;

because of this.

II. The comparison function need not return -1, 0 or 1. It should return an integer less than 0, 0 or greater than 0. Thus, all the huge if in CompareWeight() is completely superfluous, write

return p1->Weight - p2->Weight;

instead.

III. SingleCharPtr *chars = malloc(ARRAY_SZ * sizeof(SingleCharPtr)); - Why? You only use the chars array locally in the main() function, you don't need dynamic allocation for that. Why not write

SingleCharPtr chars[ARRAY_SZ];

instead?

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  • III. This is a test program to run a bigger program I am creating. That's why I wanted to test the *chars pointer locally. Thanks for your answer and feedback.
    – hyde
    Jul 22, 2013 at 8:31
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If you see the example in e.g. this manual page, you will see that the when qsort is passed an array of pointer (just like you have) then the arguments to the sorting function are actually pointers to pointers. This is because qsort passes pointers to the elements, not the elements themselves.

To accomodate for that, change accordingly:

int CompareWeights(const void *a, const void *b)
{
    const SingleCharPtr p1 = *(SingleCharPtr*)a;
    const SingleCharPtr p2 = *(SingleCharPtr*)b;

    return (p1->Weight - p2->Weight);
}

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