134
votes

For example, I recently came across this in the linux kernel:

/* Force a compilation error if condition is true */
#define BUILD_BUG_ON(condition) ((void)sizeof(char[1 - 2*!!(condition)]))

So, in your code, if you have some structure which must be, say a multiple of 8 bytes in size, maybe because of some hardware constraints, you can do:

BUILD_BUG_ON((sizeof(struct mystruct) % 8) != 0);

and it won't compile unless the size of struct mystruct is a multiple of 8, and if it is a multiple of 8, no runtime code is generated at all.

Another trick I know is from the book "Graphics Gems" which allows a single header file to both declare and initialize variables in one module while in other modules using that module, merely declare them as externs.

#ifdef DEFINE_MYHEADER_GLOBALS
#define GLOBAL
#define INIT(x, y) (x) = (y)
#else
#define GLOBAL extern
#define INIT(x, y)
#endif

GLOBAL int INIT(x, 0);
GLOBAL int somefunc(int a, int b);

With that, the code which defines x and somefunc does:

#define DEFINE_MYHEADER_GLOBALS
#include "the_above_header_file.h"

while code that's merely using x and somefunc() does:

#include "the_above_header_file.h"

So you get one header file that declares both instances of globals and function prototypes where they are needed, and the corresponding extern declarations.

So, what are your favorite C programming tricks along those lines?

2
  • 9
    This seems more like C preprocessor tricks. Mar 1, 2009 at 10:24
  • About BUILD_BUG_ON macro, what´s wrong with using #error inside and #if?
    – Ricardo
    Oct 15, 2011 at 11:46

37 Answers 37

80
votes

C99 offers some really cool stuff using anonymous arrays:

Removing pointless variables

{
    int yes=1;
    setsockopt(yourSocket, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, &yes, sizeof(int));
}

becomes

setsockopt(yourSocket, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, (int[]){1}, sizeof(int));

Passing a Variable Amount of Arguments

void func(type* values) {
    while(*values) {
        x = *values++;
        /* do whatever with x */
    }
}

func((type[]){val1,val2,val3,val4,0});

Static linked lists

int main() {
    struct llist { int a; struct llist* next;};
    #define cons(x,y) (struct llist[]){{x,y}}
    struct llist *list=cons(1, cons(2, cons(3, cons(4, NULL))));
    struct llist *p = list;
    while(p != 0) {
        printf("%d\n", p->a);
        p = p->next;
    }
}

Any I'm sure many other cool techniques I haven't thought of.

1
  • 2
    I believe your first example can also be written as &(int){1}, if you want to make it slightly more clear what your intent here is. Oct 14, 2011 at 21:37
67
votes

While reading Quake 2 source code I came up with something like this:

double normals[][] = {
  #include "normals.txt"
};

(more or less, I don't have the code handy to check it now).

Since then, a new world of creative use of the preprocessor opened in front of my eyes. I no longer include just headers, but entire chunks of code now and then (it improves reusability a lot) :-p

Thanks John Carmack! xD

3
  • 13
    You can't say carmack in an optimization thread without mentioning the fast inverse sqrt that was in the quake source. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fast_inverse_square_root
    – pg1989
    Oct 14, 2011 at 14:56
  • Where did he get 0x5f3759df from in the first place? Oct 14, 2011 at 16:23
  • 2
    @RoryHarvey: From what I could find when looking it up, it seems it was purely empirical. Some studies (I don't remember where I saw them) demonstrated that it was close to optimal, but not fully optimal. Likewise, it seems that for 64bits the value was discovered, rather than computing. Oct 14, 2011 at 16:28
50
votes

I'm fond of using = {0}; to initialize structures without needing to call memset.

struct something X = {0};

This will initialize all of the members of the struct (or array) to zero (but not any padding bytes - use memset if you need to zero those as well).

But you should be aware there are some issues with this for large, dynamically allocated structures.

3
  • Not needed for global variables, by the way.
    – strager
    Mar 1, 2009 at 20:41
  • 5
    Not needed for static variables. Global variables may be zeroed, but it's not a requirement.
    – Jamie
    Oct 23, 2009 at 13:23
  • 4
    I sometimes extend this to: const struct something zero_something = { 0 }; and then I can reset a variable on the fly with struct something X = zero_something; or part-way through a routine I can use 'X = zero_something;'. The only possible objection is that it involves reading data from somewhere; these days, a 'memset()' might be quicker - but I like the clarity of the assignment, and it is also possible to use other-than-zero values in the initializer too (and memset() followed by tweaks to individual member may be slower than a simple copy). Nov 2, 2009 at 15:55
45
votes

If we are talking about c tricks my favourite has to be Duff's Device for loop unrolling! I'm just waiting for the right opportunity to come along for me to actually use it in anger...

12
  • 4
    I've used it once to produce a measurable performance gain, but these days it's not useful on a lot of hardware. Always profile!
    – Dan Olson
    Mar 1, 2009 at 8:12
  • 6
    Yeah, the sort of people who don't understand the context Duff's device was created in: "code readability" is useless if the code is not fast enough to work. Probably none of the people who downvoted you have ever had to code for hard realtime.
    – Rob K
    Mar 3, 2009 at 18:09
  • 1
    +1, I have actually needed to use Duff's device a few times. The first time was a loop that basically just copied stuff and did some small transformation on the way. It was much, much faster than a simple memcpy() in that architecture.
    – Makis
    Jun 30, 2009 at 9:24
  • 3
    The anger will be from your colleagues and successors who have to maintain your code after you. Nov 2, 2009 at 15:50
  • 1
    As I said, I am still waiting for the right opportunity - but no one has annoyed me enough yet. I have been writing C for about 25 years now, I think I first came across Duff's device in the early 90s and I have not had to use it yet. As others have commented this kind of trick is less and less useful now as compilers get better at this kind of optimization.
    – Jackson
    Nov 2, 2009 at 16:58
42
votes

using __FILE__ and __LINE__ for debugging

#define WHERE fprintf(stderr,"[LOG]%s:%d\n",__FILE__,__LINE__);
3
  • 6
    On some compilers you get FUNCTION as well. Nov 2, 2009 at 16:11
  • 11
    __FUNCTION__is just an alias for __func__, and __func__ is in c99. Quite handy. __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ in C (GCC) is just another alias for __func__, but in C++ it will get you the full function signature.
    – sklnd
    Oct 14, 2011 at 15:24
  • FILE shows full path of filename so i use basename(FILE) Jan 24, 2012 at 16:50
31
votes

In C99

typedef struct{
    int value;
    int otherValue;
} s;

s test = {.value = 15, .otherValue = 16};

/* or */
int a[100] = {1,2,[50]=3,4,5,[23]=6,7};
28
votes

Once a mate of mine and I redefined return to find a tricky stack corruption bug.

Something like:

#define return DoSomeStackCheckStuff, return
6
  • 4
    Hopefully that was #define'd in the function body and #undefine'd at the end!
    – strager
    Mar 1, 2009 at 20:40
  • Not very fond of that - first thing that comes to my mind is that DoSomeStackCheckStuff screws up memory because of some bug and whoever is reading the code is not aware of the redefinition of return and is wonders what the /hell/ is going on.
    – gilligan
    Oct 14, 2011 at 15:33
  • 8
    @strager But that would make it basically useless. The whole point is to add some tracing to every function call. Otherwise you would just add a call to DoSomeStackCheckStuff to the functions you wanted to trace.
    – Clueless
    Oct 14, 2011 at 15:33
  • 1
    @gilligan I don't think this is the type of thing you leave enabled all the time; it seems pretty handy for one-shot debugging work.
    – sunetos
    Oct 14, 2011 at 17:01
  • does that really work? :) I would have written #define return if((DoSomeStackCheckStuff) && 0) ; else return... just as crazy I guess! Oct 14, 2011 at 19:14
22
votes

I like the "struct hack" for having a dynamically sized object. This site explains it pretty well too (though they refer to the C99 version where you can write "str[]" as the last member of a struct). you could make a string "object" like this:

struct X {
    int len;
    char str[1];
};

int n = strlen("hello world");
struct X *string = malloc(sizeof(struct X) + n);
strcpy(string->str, "hello world");
string->len = n;

here, we've allocated a structure of type X on the heap that is the size of an int (for len), plus the length of "hello world", plus 1 (since str1 is included in the sizeof(X).

It is generally useful when you want to have a "header" right before some variable length data in the same block.

9
  • I personally find it easier to just malloc() and realloc() myself and use strlen() whenever I need to find the length, but if you need a program that never knows the length of the string and will likely need to find it many times, this is probably the better road.
    – Chris Lutz
    Mar 1, 2009 at 7:36
  • 4
    "... the C99 version where you can write "str[]"" I've seen zero sized arrays in such a context, like str[0]; fairly often. I think it's C99. I know older compilers complain about zero sized arrays though.
    – smcameron
    Mar 1, 2009 at 8:27
  • 3
    I like this one as well, however, you should use something like malloc(offsetof(X, str) + numbytes) otherwise things will go wrong because of padding and alignment issues. E.g. sizeof(struct X) might be 8, not 5.
    – Fozi
    Nov 2, 2009 at 16:11
  • 3
    @Fozi: I actually don't think that would be a problem. Since this version has str[1] (not str[]) the 1 byte of str is included in the sizeof(struct X). This includes any padding between len and str.
    – Evan Teran
    Jul 8, 2010 at 20:42
  • 2
    @Rusky: How would that negatively effect anything? Suppose there is "padding" after str. OK, When I allocate sizeof(struct X) + 10 Then this makes str effectively 10 - sizeof(int) (or more, since we said there is padding) big. This overlays str and any padding after it. The only way that it would have any difference, is if there were a member after str which breaks the whole thing anyway, flexible members must be the last. Any padding at the end will only possibly cause too much to be allocated. Please provide a specific example of how it could actually go wrong.
    – Evan Teran
    Oct 14, 2011 at 15:07
17
votes

Object oriented code with C, by emulating classes.

Simply create a struct and a set of functions that take a pointer to that struct as a first parameter.

4
  • 2
    Is there still something out there that translates C++ into C, like cfront used to?
    – MarkJ
    Mar 1, 2009 at 15:13
  • 11
    This is hardly object orientation. For OO with inheritance, you'll need to add some kind of virtual function table to your object struct, which can be overloaded by "subclasses". There are lots of half-baked "C with classes" -style frameworks out there for this purpose but I recommend staying out of it.
    – exDM69
    Oct 14, 2011 at 13:10
  • It needed to be said. +1 for that.
    – Amit S
    Oct 14, 2011 at 14:24
  • 3
    @exDM69, object orientation is as much a way of thinking about a problem as it is a coding paradigm; you can do it successfully without inheritance. I did this on a few projects before jumping full bore into C++. Oct 14, 2011 at 14:43
16
votes

Instead of

printf("counter=%d\n",counter);

Use

#define print_dec(var)  printf("%s=%d\n",#var,var);
print_dec(counter);
14
votes

Using a stupid macro trick to make record definitions easier to maintain.

#define COLUMNS(S,E) [(E) - (S) + 1]

typedef struct
{
    char studentNumber COLUMNS( 1,  9);
    char firstName     COLUMNS(10, 30);
    char lastName      COLUMNS(31, 51);

} StudentRecord;
11
votes

For creating a variable which is read-only in all modules except the one it's declared in:

// Header1.h:

#ifndef SOURCE1_C
   extern const int MyVar;
#endif

// Source1.c:

#define SOURCE1_C
#include Header1.h // MyVar isn't seen in the header

int MyVar; // Declared in this file, and is writeable

// Source2.c

#include Header1.h // MyVar is seen as a constant, declared elsewhere
2
  • This feels dangerous. These are declaration and definition that do not match. While compiling Source2.c, the compiler might assume that MyVar does not change, even across a function call to Source1.c. (Note that this, as an actual const variable, differs from a pointer to const. In the latter case, the pointed-to object might still be modified via a different pointer.)
    – jilles
    Oct 16, 2011 at 16:44
  • 1
    This does not produce variable that is readonly only in some compilation units. This produces undefined behavior (see p. 6.2.7.2 of ISO 9899 and also p. 6.7.3.5).
    – Ales Hakl
    Oct 16, 2011 at 17:43
8
votes

Bit-shifts are only defined up to a shift-amount of 31 (on a 32 bit integer)..

What do you do if you want to have a computed shift that need to work with higher shift-values as well? Here is how the Theora vide-codec does it:

unsigned int shiftmystuff (unsigned int a, unsigned int v)
{
  return (a>>(v>>1))>>((v+1)>>1);
}

Or much more readable:

unsigned int shiftmystuff (unsigned int a, unsigned int v)
{
  unsigned int halfshift = v>>1;
  unsigned int otherhalf = (v+1)>>1;

  return (a >> halfshift) >> otherhalf; 
}

Performing the task the way shown above is a good deal faster than using a branch like this:

unsigned int shiftmystuff (unsigned int a, unsigned int v)
{
  if (v<=31)
    return a>>v;
  else
    return 0;
}
3
  • ... and gcc actually inlines it :) +1
    – user50049
    Mar 1, 2009 at 18:32
  • 2
    On my machine, gcc-4.3.2 gets rid of the branch in the second one by using a cmov instruction (conditional move) Mar 1, 2009 at 20:42
  • 3
    "a good deal faster than using a branch": the difference being that the branch is correct for all values of v, whereas the halfshift trick only doubles the allowable range to 63 on a 32-bit architecture, and 127 on a 64-bit one. Oct 14, 2011 at 13:18
8
votes

Declaring array's of pointer to functions for implementing finite state machines.

int (* fsm[])(void) = { ... }

The most pleasing advantage is that it is simple to force each stimulus/state to check all code paths.

In an embedded system, I'll often map an ISR to point to such a table and revector it as needed (outside the ISR).

1
  • One technique I like with this is, if you have a function that requires initialization, you initialize the pointer with a call to the initialization routine. When that runs, the last thing it does is replace the pointer with a pointer to the actual function, then call that function. That way, the initializer automatically gets called the first time the function is called, and the real function gets called every subsequent time.
    – TMN
    Oct 14, 2011 at 20:49
7
votes

Another nice pre-processor "trick" is to use the "#" character to print debugging expressions. For example:

#define MY_ASSERT(cond) \
  do { \
    if( !(cond) ) { \
      printf("MY_ASSERT(%s) failed\n", #cond); \
      exit(-1); \
    } \
  } while( 0 )

edit: the code below only works on C++. Thanks to smcameron and Evan Teran.

Yes, the compile time assert is always great. It can also be written as:

#define COMPILE_ASSERT(cond)\
     typedef char __compile_time_assert[ (cond) ? 0 : -1]
8
  • The COMPILE_ASSERT macro can't be used twice though, as it pollutes the namespace with a typedef, and the 2nd usage gets: error: redefinition of typedef ‘__compile_time_assert’
    – smcameron
    Mar 1, 2009 at 6:58
  • Did you actually try this? You can "typedef foo;" as many times as you like. That's how you do predeclarations. I've used it for 2.5 years now on several compilers, both gcc, VC and a compiler for an embedded environment, and never encountered any difficulties.
    – Gilad Naor
    Mar 1, 2009 at 7:03
  • I hate the C preprocessor ... :(
    – hasen
    Mar 1, 2009 at 7:11
  • 1
    Yes, I tried it. I cut and pasted the error message from the compiler, which was gcc.
    – smcameron
    Mar 1, 2009 at 7:11
  • 1
    @Gilad: it is legal in c++ to have redundant typedefs, but not in c.
    – Evan Teran
    Mar 1, 2009 at 7:18
6
votes

I wouldn't really call it a favorite trick, since I've never used it, but the mention of Duff's Device reminded me of this article about implementing Coroutines in C. It always gives me a chuckle, but I'm sure it could be useful some time.

1
  • I have actually used this technique in practice to make the code driving a sequence of dependent asynchronous I/O vaguely human-readable. The main difference is that I don't store the coroutine state in a static variable but instead allocate a struct dynamically and pass a pointer to that into the coroutine function. A bunch of macros make this more palatable. It's not nice but better than the async/callback version that jumps all over the place. I'd use green threads (via swapcontext() on *nixes) if I could though.
    – pmdj
    Oct 14, 2011 at 19:07
6
votes
#if TESTMODE == 1    
    debug=1;
    while(0);     // Get attention
#endif

The while(0); has no effect on the program, but the compiler will issue a warning about "this does nothing", which is enough to get me to go look at the offending line and then see the real reason I wanted to call attention to it.

2
  • 9
    couldn't you use #warning instead ? Nov 2, 2009 at 16:07
  • Apparently, I could. It's not completely standard, but it worked in the compilers that I use. Interestingly, the embedded compiler translated a #define, while gcc did not.
    – gbarry
    Nov 2, 2009 at 20:05
6
votes

I'm a fan of xor hacks:

Swap 2 pointers without third temp pointer:

int * a;
int * b;
a ^= b;
b ^= a;
a ^= b;

Or I really like the xor linked list with only one pointer. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XOR_linked_list)

Each node in the linked list is the Xor of the previous node and the next node. To traverse forward, the address of the nodes are found in the following manner :

LLNode * first = head;
LLNode * second = first.linked_nodes;
LLNode * third = second.linked_nodes ^ first;
LLNode * fourth = third.linked_nodes ^ second;

etc.

or to traverse backwards:

LLNode * last = tail;
LLNode * second_to_last = last.linked_nodes;
LLNode * third_to_last = second_to_last.linked_nodes ^ last;
LLNode * fourth_to_last = third_to_last.linked_nodes ^ second_to_last;

etc.

While not terribly useful (you can't start traversing from an arbitrary node) I find it to be very cool.

5
votes

This one comes from the book 'Enough rope to shoot yourself in the foot':

In the header declare

#ifndef RELEASE
#  define D(x) do { x; } while (0)
#else
#  define D(x)
#endif

In your code place testing statements eg:

D(printf("Test statement\n"));

The do/while helps in case the contents of the macro expand to multiple statements.

The statement will only be printed if '-D RELEASE' flag for compiler is not used.

You can then eg. pass the flag to your makefile etc.

Not sure how this works in windows but in *nix it works well

4
  • You might want to expand D(x) to {} when RELEASE is defined, so that it plays nice with if statements. Otherwise "if (a) D(x);" will expand to just "if (a)" when you have RELEASE defined. That will give you some nice bugs in the RELEASE verison
    – MarkJ
    Mar 1, 2009 at 14:53
  • 3
    @MarkJ: NO. The way it is, "if(a) D(x);" expands to "if(a);" which is perfectly fine. If you had D(x) expand to {}, then "if(a)if(b)D(x);else foo();" would INCORRECTLY expand to "if(a)if(b){};else foo();", causing the "else foo()" to match with the second if instead of the first if. Mar 1, 2009 at 20:50
  • To be honest i mostly use this macro for testing print statements, or if i had a conditional statement i would enclose it all eg. D(if(a) foo();); Mar 2, 2009 at 13:35
  • 1
    @AdamRosenfield: Using #define D(x) do { } while(0) instead handles that case (and can be applied to the branch that inserts x as well for consistency)
    – rpetrich
    Oct 14, 2011 at 14:40
3
votes

Rusty actually produced a whole set of build conditionals in ccan, check out the build assert module:

#include <stddef.h>
#include <ccan/build_assert/build_assert.h>

struct foo {
        char string[5];
        int x;
};

char *foo_string(struct foo *foo)
{
        // This trick requires that the string be first in the structure
        BUILD_ASSERT(offsetof(struct foo, string) == 0);
        return (char *)foo;
}

There are lots of other helpful macros in the actual header, which are easy to drop into place.

I try, with all of my might to resist the pull of the dark side (and preprocessor abuse) by sticking mostly to inline functions, but I do enjoy clever, useful macros like the ones you described.

3
  • Yeah, I recently came across ccan, and was considering contributing some code, but haven't yet wrapped my head around the "ccan way." Thanks for the link though, more motivation to look into ccan, which I really hope gets some traction.
    – smcameron
    Mar 1, 2009 at 6:42
  • Well, I would not get too concerned on the 'ccan way' until its more established ... right now ccan-lint is being proposed as a GSOC project. Its a small and rather friendly group .. and a great place to dump snippets :)
    – user50049
    Mar 1, 2009 at 7:03
  • BTW, I noticed Rusty's BuILD_ASSERT is just like the macro from the linux kernel (unsurprising) but lacking one of the "nots" (or bangs, or !'s) and noticing that, I think my example usage of the macro I posted is not correct. Should have been: "BUILD_BUG_ON((sizeof(struct mystruct) % 8))"
    – smcameron
    Mar 1, 2009 at 7:06
3
votes

Two good source books for this sort of stuff are The Practice of Programming and Writing Solid Code. One of them (I don't remember which) says: Prefer enum to #define where you can, because enum gets checked by the compiler.

2
  • 1
    AFAIK, in C89/90 there is NO typechecking for enums. enums are just somehow more convenient #defines.
    – cschol
    Mar 7, 2009 at 23:35
  • Bottom of page 39, 2nd ED K&R. There is at least the opportunity for checking. Oct 14, 2011 at 17:58
3
votes

Not specific to C, but I've always liked the XOR operator. One cool thing it can do is "swap without a temp value":

int a = 1;
int b = 2;

printf("a = %d, b = %d\n", a, b);

a ^= b;
b ^= a;
a ^= b;

printf("a = %d, b = %d\n", a, b);

Result:

a = 1, b = 2

a = 2, b = 1

3
  • a = 1; b = 2; a = a+b; b = a-b; a = a-b; gives the same result too
    – Grambot
    Oct 14, 2011 at 16:40
  • This will also swap a and b: a ^= b ^= a ^= b;
    – vikhyat
    Oct 14, 2011 at 17:13
  • @TheCapn: addition might overflow, though. Oct 15, 2011 at 11:42
2
votes

I like the concept of container_of used for example in lists. Basically, you do not need to specify next and last fields for each structure which will be in the list. Instead, you append the list structure header to actual linked items.

Have a look on include/linux/list.h for real-life examples.

1
vote

I think the use of userdata pointers is pretty neat. A fashion losing ground nowdays. It's not so much a C feature but is pretty easy to use in C.

4
  • 1
    I wish that I understood what you meant here. Could you explain more? What is a userdata pointer?
    – Zan Lynx
    Mar 2, 2009 at 14:49
  • 1
    Plz see here stackoverflow.com/questions/602826/…
    – epatel
    Mar 3, 2009 at 10:29
  • it's primarily for callbacks. It is some data you would like to be given back to you each time the callback is fired. Particularly useful for passing a C++ this pointer to a callback so you can tie an object to an event.
    – Evan Teran
    Mar 3, 2009 at 18:31
  • Ah, yes. Thanks. I use this a lot, but I have never called it that.
    – Zan Lynx
    Mar 3, 2009 at 22:39
1
vote

I use X-Macros to to let the pre-compiler generate code. They are especially useful for defining error values and associated error strings in one place, but they can go far beyond that.

1
vote

Our codebase has a trick similar to

#ifdef DEBUG

#define my_malloc(amt) my_malloc_debug(amt, __FILE__, __LINE__)
void * my_malloc_debug(int amt, char* file, int line)
#else
void * my_malloc(int amt)
#endif
{
    //remember file and line no. for this malloc in debug mode
}

which allows for the tracking of memory leaks in debug mode. I always thought this was cool.

1
vote

Fun with macros:

#define SOME_ENUMS(F) \
    F(ZERO, zero) \
    F(ONE, one) \
    F(TWO, two)

/* Now define the constant values.  See how succinct this is. */

enum Constants {
#define DEFINE_ENUM(A, B) A,
    SOME_ENUMS(DEFINE_ENUMS)
#undef DEFINE_ENUM
};

/* Now a function to return the name of an enum: */

const char *ToString(int c) {
    switch (c) {
    default: return NULL; /* Or whatever. */
#define CASE_MACRO(A, B) case A: return #b;
     SOME_ENUMS(CASE_MACRO)
#undef CASE_MACRO
     }
}
0
votes

Here is an example how to make C code completly unaware about what is actually used of HW for running the app. The main.c does the setup and then the free layer can be implemented on any compiler/arch. I think it is quite neat for abstracting C code a bit, so it does not get to be to spesific.

Adding a complete compilable example here.

/* free.h */
#ifndef _FREE_H_
#define _FREE_H_
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
typedef unsigned char ubyte;

typedef void (*F_ParameterlessFunction)() ;
typedef void (*F_CommandFunction)(ubyte byte) ;

void F_SetupLowerLayer (
F_ParameterlessFunction initRequest,
F_CommandFunction sending_command,
F_CommandFunction *receiving_command);
#endif

/* free.c */
static F_ParameterlessFunction Init_Lower_Layer = NULL;
static F_CommandFunction Send_Command = NULL;
static ubyte init = 0;
void recieve_value(ubyte my_input)
{
    if(init == 0)
    {
        Init_Lower_Layer();
        init = 1;
    }
    printf("Receiving 0x%02x\n",my_input);
    Send_Command(++my_input);
}

void F_SetupLowerLayer (
    F_ParameterlessFunction initRequest,
    F_CommandFunction sending_command,
    F_CommandFunction *receiving_command)
{
    Init_Lower_Layer = initRequest;
    Send_Command = sending_command;
    *receiving_command = &recieve_value;
}

/* main.c */
int my_hw_do_init()
{
    printf("Doing HW init\n");
    return 0;
}
int my_hw_do_sending(ubyte send_this)
{
    printf("doing HW sending 0x%02x\n",send_this);
    return 0;
}
F_CommandFunction my_hw_send_to_read = NULL;

int main (void)
{
    ubyte rx = 0x40;
    F_SetupLowerLayer(my_hw_do_init,my_hw_do_sending,&my_hw_send_to_read);

    my_hw_send_to_read(rx);
    getchar();
    return 0;
}
2
  • 4
    Care to elaborate, maybe explaining a practical use? Nov 2, 2009 at 16:17
  • As an wxample if I have to write a test program using som HW interface that generates interupts in the end. Then this module can be setup to execute a function outside the normal scope as a signal/interrupt handler.
    – eaanon01
    Nov 3, 2009 at 7:14
0
votes
if(---------)  
printf("hello");  
else   
printf("hi");

Fill in the blanks so that neither hello nor hi would appear in output.
ans: fclose(stdout)

1
  • you can format code with the {} toolbar button (I've done it for you). The "Quote" button doesn't keep whitespace or apply syntax highlighting. Feb 11, 2011 at 11:49

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.