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You can define a data type keyword as an alias for any type, and then
use the alias syntactically like a built-in type keyword such as
int
. You do this using typedef
, so these aliases are
also called typedef names.
typedef
is followed by text that looks just like a variable
declaration, but instead of declaring variables it defines data type
keywords.
Here’s how to define fooptr
as a typedef alias for the type
struct foo *
, then declare x
and y
as variables
with that type:
typedef struct foo *fooptr; fooptr x, y;
That declaration is equivalent to the following one:
struct foo *x, *y;
You can define a typedef alias for any type. For instance, this makes
frobcount
an alias for type int
:
typedef int frobcount;
This doesn’t define a new type distinct from int
. Rather,
frobcount
is another name for the type int
. Once the
variable is declared, it makes no difference which name the
declaration used.
There is a syntactic difference, however, between frobcount
and
int
: A typedef name cannot be used with
signed
, unsigned
, long
or short
. It has
to specify the type all by itself. So you can’t write this:
unsigned frobcount f1; /* Error! */
But you can write this:
typedef unsigned int unsigned_frobcount; unsigned_frobcount f1;
In other words, a typedef name is not an alias for a keyword
such as int
. It stands for a type, and that could be
the type int
.
Typedef names are in the same namespace as functions and variables, so you can’t use the same name for a typedef and a function, or a typedef and a variable. When a typedef is declared inside a code block, it is in scope only in that block.
Warning: Avoid defining typedef names that end in ‘_t’, because many of these have standard meanings.
You can redefine a typedef name to the exact same type as its first definition, but you cannot redefine a typedef name to a different type, even if the two types are compatible. For example, this is valid:
typedef int frobcount; typedef int frotzcount; typedef frotzcount frobcount; typedef frobcount frotzcount;
because each typedef name is always defined with the same type
(int
), but this is not valid:
enum foo {f1, f2, f3}; typedef enum foo frobcount; typedef int frobcount;
Even though the type enum foo
is compatible with int
,
they are not the same type.
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