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Home/ Questions/Q 6700741
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T06:51:04+00:00 2026-05-26T06:51:04+00:00

I have one function: int compare(char * c1, char * c2){ … … }

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I have one function:

int compare(char * c1, char * c2){
...
...
}

What are the various styles in which I can write a function int ret_compare(void * item) that returns a pointer to compare?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T06:51:05+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 6:51 am

    There are two main styles, one using a typedef and one not (with two variants of the typedef). Your comparator should take constant pointers, as below:

    int compare(const char *c1, const char *c2) { ... }
    
    // Raw definition of a function returning a pointer to a function that returns an int
    // and takes two constant char pointers as arguments
    int (*ret_compare1(void *item))(const char *, const char *)
    {
        // Unused argument - item
        return compare;
    }
    
    // More usual typedef; a Comparator2 is a pointer to a function that returns an int
    // and takes two constant char pointers as arguments
    typedef int (*Comparator2)(const char *, const char *);
    
    // And ret_compare2 is a function returning a Comparator2
    Comparator2 ret_compare2(void *item)
    {
        // Unused argument - item
        return compare;
    }
    
    // Less usual typedef; a Comparator3 is a function that returns an int
    // and takes two constant char pointers as arguments
    typedef int Comparator3(const char *, const char *);
    
    // And ret_compare3 is a function returning a pointer to a Comparator3
    Comparator3 *ret_compare3(void *item)
    {
        // Unused argument - item
        return compare;
    }
    

    Note that these comparators cannot be used with bsearch() and qsort() (unless you use fairly gruesome casts) because those comparators are expected to take const void * arguments.

    Note, too, that for comparing strings, as opposed to single characters, the function used by qsort() or bsearch() should be similar to:

    int string_comparator(const void *v1, const void *v2)
    {
        const char *s1 = *(char **)v1;
        const char *s2 = *(char **)v2;
        return(strcmp(s1, s2));
    }
    
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