struct things {
char foo[25];
int bar;
};
struct morethings {
char morefoo[25];
int morebar;
int another;
};
int main() {
printf("char[25] + int: %d | struct things: %d\n\n", sizeof(char[25]) + sizeof(int), sizeof(struct things));
printf("char[25] + int + int: %d | struct morethings: %d\n\n", sizeof(char[25]) + sizeof(int) + sizeof(int), sizeof(struct morethings));
return 0;
}
Return:
char[25] + int: 29 | struct things: 32
char[25] + int + int: 33 | struct morethings: 36
I believe that return of sizeof
should the same in both cases, but the struct always have the most 3 bytes. For what reason this happens?
Can remove? This can disrupt what I'm doing, which is to save in a file structure.
int
s are nicely aligned on a 4-byte boundary. So the struct makes room for 25 bytes, then throws in 3 of padding, starting the int at byte 28.#pragma pack(push) struct Struct {}; #pragma pack(pop)
. Check gcc for example. Or MSDN