How can I initialize a structure if one field in the structure is itself a structure?
3 Answers
You need to use more braces (actually, they're optional, but GCC makes a warning these days). Here's an example:
struct s1 { int a; int b; };
struct s2 { int c; struct s1 s; };
struct s2 my_s2 = { 5, { 6, 3 } };
-
Optional in only where member
s
is fully initialised (i.e. all members), necessary if you want to only partially initialise the structure.– CliffordJul 5, 2010 at 9:09 -
4In C99 you may use the following notation which is easier to maintain and to read:
struct s2 my_s2 = { .c = 5, .s = { .a = 6, .b = 3 } };
Jul 5, 2010 at 16:40
Nesting of structure
You can initialize a structure if one field in the structure is itself a structure
struct add{
int house;
char road;
};
struct emp{
int phone;
struct add a;
};
struct emp e = { 123456, 23, "abc"};
printf("%d %d %c",e.phone,e.a.house,e.a.road);
struct A
{
int n;
}
struct B
{
A a;
} b;
You can initialize n by the following statement. Is this what you are looking for.
b.a.n = 10;
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2In the terms used to define the language, that is an example of assignment rather than initialisation. In this context an initialiser is used only at declaration of an object.– CliffordJul 5, 2010 at 9:06