Edit: The code below has been modified to work as the problem has been solved.
Specifically, (*hardwareList.next_item)->next
was originally written without brackets (e.g. as *hardwareList.next_item->next
) and the compiler didn't understand it.
I'm trying to workout why the compiler is getting confused with my C code. I'm trying to create a linked list that stores all the items and also a pointer to the address-of the last "next" variable, for easy appending.
typedef struct {
int recordNum;
char toolName[25];
int quantity;
float cost;
} HardwareData;
typedef struct _HardwareListItem{
HardwareData data;
struct _HardwareListItem* next;
} HardwareListItem;
typedef struct _HardwareList {
HardwareListItem* items;
HardwareListItem** next_item;
} HardwareList;
HardwareList readFromFile(FILE* fp)
{
char stopReading = 0;
HardwareList hardwareList = {0};
hardwareList.next_item = &hardwareList.items;
do {
*hardwareList.next_item = (HardwareListItem*)calloc(1, sizeof(HardwareData));
if (*hardwareList.next_item == NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "OOM Reading File\n");
fflush(stderr);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
if (fread(&((*hardwareList.next_item)->data), sizeof(HardwareData), 1, fp) != 1) {
free(*hardwareList.next_item);
*hardwareList.next_item = NULL;
stopReading = 1;
} else {
hardwareList.next_item = &((*hardwareList.next_item)->next);
}
} while(!stopReading);
return hardwareList;
}
Compiler says:
line 31: error: request for member 'data' in something not a structure or union
line 36: error: request for member 'next' in something not a structure or union