Well, you probably should have used arrays for such a thing in the first place since that would have made this task so much easier :-)
However, you could try casting the structure into an array and printing that out. There's no guarantee it will work in every implementation since it may be that the structure gets padded differently to an array, though I couldn't imagine why, but you may get lucky:
int *base = (int*)(&bar.one);
for (int i = 0; i < 50; i++)
std::cout << "Item #" << (i + 1) << " = " << base[i] << '\n';
By way of example, the following program:
#include <iostream>
struct foo {
int one, two, three, four;
};
int main() {
foo bar;
bar.one = 42;
bar.two = 314159;
bar.three = 271828;
bar.four = 1414;
int *base = (int*)(&bar.one);
for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++)
std::cout << "Item #" << (i + 1) << " = " << base[i] << '\n';
return 0;
}
outputs this:
Item #1 = 42
Item #2 = 314159
Item #3 = 271828
Item #4 = 1414
in my environment (Debian 7, g++ 4.7.2):
But, if you want to treat them like an array, they really should be an array.