I want to learn more about using function pointers in C structs as a way to emulate objects-oriented programming, but in my search, I’ve just found questions like this where the answer is simply to use a function pointer without describing how that would work.
My best guess is something like this
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
struct my_struct
{
int data;
struct my_struct* (*set_data) (int);
};
struct my_struct* my_struct_set_data(struct my_struct* m, int new_data)
{
m->data = new_data;
return m;
}
struct my_struct* my_struct_create() {
struct my_struct* result = malloc((sizeof(struct my_struct)));
result->data = 0;
result->set_data = my_struct_set_data;
return result;
}
int main(int argc, const char* argv[])
{
struct my_struct* thing = my_struct_create();
thing->set_data(1);
printf("%d\n", thing->data);
free(thing);
return 0;
}
But that give me compiler warnings warning: assignment from incompatible pointer type, so obviously I’m doing something wrong. Could someone please provide a small but complete example of how to use a function pointer in a C struct correctly?
My class taught in C does not even mention these. It makes me wonder whether these are actually used by C programmers. What are the advantages and disadvantages of using function pointers in C structs?
In your struct definition, change it to
and now use the above function pointer in main as