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Home/ Questions/Q 304997
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T07:19:56+00:00 2026-05-12T07:19:56+00:00

I can declare a structure: typedef struct { int var1; int var2; int var3;

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I can declare a structure:

typedef struct
{
  int var1;
  int var2;
  int var3;
} test_t;

Then create an array of those structs structure with default values:

test_t theTest[2] =
{
   {1,2,3},
   {4,5,6}
};

But after I’ve created the array, is there any way to change the values in the same way I did above, using only one line, specifying every value explicitly without a loop?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T07:19:56+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 7:19 am

    In C99 you can assign each structure in a single line. I don’t think that you can assign the array of structs in one line though.

    C99 introduces compound literals. See the Dr. Dobbs article here: The New C: Compound Literals

    theTest[0] = (test_t){7,8,9};
    theTest[1] = (test_t){10,11,12};
    

    You could assign to a pointer like this:

    test_t* p; 
    p = (test_t [2]){ {7,8,9}, {10,11,12} };
    

    You could use memcpy as well:

    memcpy(theTest, (test_t [2]){ {7,8,9}, {10,11,12} }, sizeof(test_t [2]);
    

    Above tested with gcc -std=c99 (version 4.2.4) on linux.

    You should read the Dr. Dobbs article to understand how compound literals work.

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