I have this in a C file:

struct T
{
    int foo;
};

the C file has an include to an h file with those lines:

typedef struct T T;
void listInsertFirst(T data, int key, LinkedList* ListToInsertTo);

the function listInsertFirst is the one I'm getting the warning on. How can I fix it?

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thanks,and what if I want the type to be knonwn if someone includes the h file ? – Belgi May 13 '11 at 19:32
How is LinkedList defined? – onteria_ May 13 '11 at 19:35
2  
One thing you should be aware of is that you're passing a struct by value here. That's almost surely a bad idea... – R.. May 13 '11 at 19:36
Any reason why you are typedef-ing in the C file rather than in the header file. Also, you can typedef the struct straight out by having something like struct T { int foo;} T; – Gangadhar May 13 '11 at 19:37
What parameter is the compiler referring to? – Jeff Mercado May 13 '11 at 19:41
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4 Answers

When you include the header file, the compiler knows that T is a structure of unknown size and that listInsertFirst wants one as its first argument. But the compiler cannot arrange a call to listInsertFirst as it doesn't know how many bytes to push on the stack for the T data parameter, the size of T is only known inside the file where listInsertFirst is defined.

The best solution would be to change listInsertFirst to take a T* as its first argument so your header file would say this:

extern void listInsertFirst(T *data, int key, LinkedList* ListToInsertTo);

Then you get an opaque pointer for your T data type and, since all pointers are the same size (in the modern world at least), the compiler will know how to build the stack when calling listInsertFirst.

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As we've found out in the comments, the problem was that the definition of struct T occurred after the definition of T in the header. You really have things backwards here. The header should be defining all the types and function prototypes and your C files should be using them.

What you want to be doing instead is change the signature of your insert function to receive a pointer to your data and the size of the data. Then you can allocate some memory for the data, copy it and store it. You don't need a specific type, just declare it a void *.

void listInsertFirst(void *data, size_t data_size, int key, LinkedList* ListToInsertTo);

Then the caller would do something like this:

struct T { int foo; };
struct T x = { ... };
int someKey = ...;
LinkedList *someList = ...;
listInsertFirst(&x, sizeof x, someKey, someList);
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Are you sure it is the first parameter that is the problem? To be sure, try changing the parameter type from T to int temporarily. More than likely, the third parameter is actually the problem.

Many compilers don't point at the problem in these sorts of issues very well.

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Try to move the structure definition to the h file, before the typedef.

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the problem with this is that I have : typedef struct LinkedList { ListNode* head; ListNode* tail; }LinkedList; which uses the type "ListNode", If I put this typedef struct on the h file I'd have to add the typedef struct of "ListNode",but no one should be aware of this type... – Belgi May 13 '11 at 19:38
But LinkedList must be aware of ListNode. So, if someone is aware of LinkedList, it must be aware also with ListNOde. You can also add another h file: Add ListNode to the new h file and include it in your original h file – Amir May 13 '11 at 19:42
Amir that's a good idea.thanks. – Belgi May 13 '11 at 19:45
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