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Home/ Questions/Q 750265
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T14:31:52+00:00 2026-05-14T14:31:52+00:00

Suppose I have the following struct and function returning a pointer: typedef struct {

  • 0

Suppose I have the following struct and function returning a pointer:

typedef struct {
  int num;
  void *nums;
  int size;
} Mystruct;

Mystruct *mystruct(int num, int size)
{ 
   //Is the following correct? Is there a more efficient way?
   Mystruct mystruct;
   mystruct.num = num;
   mystruct.size = size;
   mystruct.nums = malloc(num*sizeof(size));
   Mystruct *my;
   *my = mystruct;
   return my;
}

I want to define any Mystruct pointer using the above function. Should I declare a Mystruct variable, define the properties of Mystruct, assign a pointer to it, and return the pointer or define the properties of a mystruct property through a pointer immediately?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T14:31:53+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 2:31 pm

    Should I declare a Mystruct variable,
    define the properties of Mystruct,
    assign a pointer to it, and return the
    pointer

    Definitely not, because the variable defined in the function (in “auto” storage class) will disappear as the function exits, and you’ll return a dangling pointer.

    You could accept a pointer to a Mystruct (caller’s responsibility to allocate that) and fill it in; or, you can use malloc to create a new one (caller’s responsibility to free it when it’s done). The second option at least lets you keep the function signature you seem to be keen on:

    Mystruct *mystruct(int num, int size)
    {
       Mystruct *p = malloc(sizeof(MyStruct));
       ....
       return p;
    }
    

    but it’s often an inferior one — since the caller has to have responsibilities anyway, may as well go with the first option and potentially gain performance (if the caller can use an auto-class instance because it knows the scope of use is bounded).

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