Suppose I have this struct (which incidentally contain bit-fields, but you shouldn’t care):
struct Element {
unsigned int a1 : 1;
unsigned int a2 : 1;
...
unsigned int an : 1;
};
and I want to access the i’th member in a convenient way. Let’s examine a retrieval solution.
I came up with this function:
int getval(struct Element *ep, int n)
{
int val;
switch(n) {
case 1: val = ep->a1; break;
case 2: val = ep->a2; break;
...
case n: val = ep->an; break;
}
return val;
}
But I suspect that there is a much simpler solution. Something like array accessing style, maybe.
I tried to do something like that:
#define getval(s,n) s.a##n
But expectedly it doesn’t work.
Is there a nicer solution?
Unless you have specific knowledge of the underlying structure of the struct, there is no way to implement such a method in C. There are all sorts of problems that will get in the way including
You’re best off implementing a method by hand for your struct which has a deep understanding of the internal members of the structure.