is f().c legal? How about (&(f()))->c ?
Tom Middleton
middleto at sdsu.UUCP
Thu Feb 2 17:10:06 AEST 1989
In article <2648 at vedge.UUCP> lai at vedge.UUCP (David Lai) writes:
>Here f() returns a structure.
I may be missing the point here but it seems that one problem is f()
does not return a structure but rather a pointer to a structure. I
don't know how an entire structure can be returned by a function.
This would imply that f()->c should be legal, but I don't know if
that is what you meant to say in the first place. Seems to me that
&(f()) is the address of the pointer returned by the function f and
although (&(f()))-> is legal it isn't what you think it is.
--
G O P A D R E S ! Thomas Earl Middleton
1989 aka Happy Bare
N L C H A M P S ! UUCP ...!ucsd!sdsu!middleto
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