The address of a struct
is indeed the address of the first element, though you'll need to know the type of the element in order to safely cast it.
(C17 §6.7.2.1.15: "A pointer to a structure object, suitably
converted, points to its initial member ... and vice versa. There may
be unnamed padding within as structure object, but not at its
beginning.")
While it's kind of ugly, numerous pieces of production software rely on this. QNX, for example, uses this kind of behavior in open control block (OCB) logic when writing resource managers. Gtk also something similar.
Your current implementation is dangerous though. If you must rely on this behavior, do it like so, and don't attempt to pass a pointer-to-struct as an argument to printf()
, as you're intentionally breaking a feature of a language with minimal type-safety.
struct example {
int foo;
int bar;
};
struct example myStruct = { 1, 2 };
int* pFoo = (int*)&myStruct;
printf("%d", *pFoo);
Finally, this only holds for the first element. Subsequent elements may not be situation where you expect them to be, namely due to struct
packing and padding.