I found some source code that I want to incorporate into a C program I am writing. Let's call it existing.c. This file contains a typedef for a struct that is required for a parameter to a function defined lower down in the file. I want to call this function in my file main.c. I know I could probably get access to the function by declaring a function prototype in main.c, but I will also need access to that struct definition to declare and call the function.
There is no .h file for existing.c, although I could of course make one, say existing.h. But if I put the typedef in existing.h, then it seems like I would have to put #include "existing.h" into existing.c, which does not seem correct from my understanding of header files. I thought their purpose was to make the code in a certain file available to other compilation units, and shouldn't be required by that file itself.
So I guess my main question is straightforward, how do I use the function defined in existing.c in my own file main.c? Can I do it without a header file, like by putting some kind of struct prototype in main.c, similar to a function prototype, or specify the struct as external or something along those lines?
Edit: I probably should have mentioned in my original post that one reason I was hoping to avoid using a header was so I could incorporate the existing.c file unaltered in case there are revisions of this source in the future. Judging from the answers this is not possible.