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I have a struct with a nested union in c++, as follows:

typedef enum {            
  VAL_BOOL,               
  VAL_NIL, 
  VAL_NUMBER,             
} ValueType; 

typedef struct {  
  ValueType type; 
  union {         
    bool boolean; 
    double number;
  } as; 
} Value; 

I am trying to build a #define function to make initializing these values more readable, and this is what I have thus far, but it doesn't compile:

#define NUMBER_VAL(value) ((Value){ VAL_NUMBER, { .number = value } })

The above implementation generates the following error at compile-time when the NUMBER_VAL(val) is used: expected an expression

The goal here is to be able to define a Value by writing something like the following:

double dub = 1.23;
Value val = NUMBER_VAL(dub);

or pass it to a function, like so:

void process_value(Value value);
...
double dub = 45.6; 
process_value(NUMBER_VAL(dub));

Is there some way to convert this #define-ition into an expression that would let me use it this way? Or is my only option here to write a proper function to build these structs for me?


For the record, I know that the following would work, but I was hoping for something more succinct.

Value NUMBER_VAL(double value) {
    Value val;
    val.type = VAL_NUMBER;
    val.as.number = value;
    return val;
}
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  • Your code works for me on online GDB. What compiler are you using? Apr 10, 2019 at 2:55
  • I'm using whatever comes with Visual Studio 2017 Visual c++ 2015 14.0.24215 Apr 10, 2019 at 3:01
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    C++ doesn't have designated initialisers. It also doesn't require typedefs. That all looks like C. Are you sure you want a C++ solution? A C++ solution would use constructors, not macros.
    – rici
    Apr 10, 2019 at 3:08
  • This is code being ported over from a C solution into a C++ solution. However, I was under the impression that C++ was actually a superset of C, so this is some of the latent C syntax. as @DeveloperPaul noted, this works in other places, so there must be some issues with my compiler and/or compiler flags. I'll probably just end up declaring Value as a class if I can't find the issue here. Apr 10, 2019 at 3:14
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    C++ is not a superset of C, and it does not have designated initialisers. GDB is not a compiler, so the fact that it accepts both C and C++ syntaxes is not relevant. And there is no difference between struct and class in C++ other than default nember visibility (public for a struct and private for a class).
    – rici
    Apr 10, 2019 at 3:40

1 Answer 1

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Live code.

In C++ unions can have constructors. In your struct you can define constructor overloads to initialize the union member along with the union tag i.e. type.

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