If you also want to ensure the valid range, there's a technique that comes with the little overhead of a pointer dereference for getting the integer value -- and a lot of boilerplate typing. It might still be useful because it leverages you from writing range-checking code where it would be otherwise necessary.
greetings.h:
#ifndef GREETINGS_H
#define GREETINGS_H
struct greetings;
typedef struct greetings Greetings;
extern const Greetings * const Greetings_hello;
extern const Greetings * const Greetings_bye;
extern const Greetings * const Greetings_how;
const char *Greetings_str(const Greetings *g);
int Greetings_int(const Greetings *g);
#endif
greetings.c:
#include "greetings.h"
struct greetings {
const int val;
};
static const Greetings hello = { 0 };
static const Greetings bye = { 1 };
static const Greetings how = { 2 };
const Greetings * const Greetings_hello = &hello;
const Greetings * const Greetings_bye = &bye;
const Greetings * const Greetings_how = &how;
static const char * const Greetings_names[] = {
"hello",
"bye",
"how"
};
const char *
Greetings_str(const Greetings *g)
{
return Greetings_names[g->val];
}
int
Greetings_int(const Greetings *g)
{
return g->val;
}
example main.c:
#include <stdio.h>
#include "greetings.h"
void
printTest(const Greetings *greeting)
{
if (greeting == Greetings_how) return;
puts(Greetings_str(greeting));
}
int
main()
{
const Greetings *g = Greetings_hello;
printTest(g);
}
Yes, a LOT to type, but you get full type and range safety. No other compilation unit can ever instantiate a struct greetings
, so you are completely safe.
Edit 2015-07-04: For protecting against NULL, there are two possibilities. Either use NULL for the default value (#define Greetings_hello 0
instead of the pointer used now). This is very convenient, but drops type safety for default enum values, NULL can be used for any enum. Or declare it invalid and either check for it in the accessor methods, returning an error, or use something like GCCs __attribute__((nonnull()))
to catch it at compile time, eg in greetings.h:
const char *Greetings_str(const Greetings *g)
__attribute__((nonnull(1)));