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Top Forums Programming returning multiple values from a function in C Post 302277774 by aobai on Sunday 18th of January 2009 12:25:48 AM
Old 01-18-2009
Code:
#include <stdio.h>
void foo(int id, char **first_name, char **last_name)
{
/*
  this is just an example to illustrate my problem... real code makes
  use of the "id" parameter.
*/
   *first_name = (char *)malloc(99 * sizeof(char));
   strcpy(*first_name, "john");
   *last_name = (char *)malloc(99 * sizeof(char));
   strcpy(*last_name, "doe");
printf("----inside foo(): first name is: [%s]\n", *first_name);
printf("----inside foo(): last name is: [%s]\n", *last_name);

 
} /* foo() */

main() 
{
  char *fname, *lname;
  
  foo(4, &fname, &lname); 

  printf("x-----------------\n");
  printf("first name is: [%s]\n", fname);
  printf("y-----------------\n");
  printf("last name is: [%s]\n", lname);

}


Last edited by Franklin52; 01-18-2009 at 10:32 AM.. Reason: adding code tags
 

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ffi_call(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					       ffi_call(3)

NAME
ffi_call -- Invoke a foreign function. SYNOPSIS
#include <ffi.h> void ffi_call(ffi_cif *cif, void (*fn)(void), void *rvalue, void **avalue); DESCRIPTION
The ffi_call function provides a simple mechanism for invoking a function without requiring knowledge of the function's interface at compile time. fn is called with the values retrieved from the pointers in the avalue array. The return value from fn is placed in storage pointed to by rvalue. cif contains information describing the data types, sizes and alignments of the arguments to and return value from fn, and must be initialized with ffi_prep_cif before it is used with ffi_call. rvalue must point to storage that is sizeof(ffi_arg) or larger for non-floating point types. For smaller-sized return value types, the ffi_arg or ffi_sarg integral type must be used to hold the return value. EXAMPLES
#include <ffi.h> #include <stdio.h> unsigned char foo(unsigned int, float); int main(int argc, const char **argv) { ffi_cif cif; ffi_type *arg_types[2]; void *arg_values[2]; ffi_status status; // Because the return value from foo() is smaller than sizeof(long), it // must be passed as ffi_arg or ffi_sarg. ffi_arg result; // Specify the data type of each argument. Available types are defined // in <ffi/ffi.h>. arg_types[0] = &ffi_type_uint; arg_types[1] = &ffi_type_float; // Prepare the ffi_cif structure. if ((status = ffi_prep_cif(&cif, FFI_DEFAULT_ABI, 2, &ffi_type_uint8, arg_types)) != FFI_OK) { // Handle the ffi_status error. } // Specify the values of each argument. unsigned int arg1 = 42; float arg2 = 5.1; arg_values[0] = &arg1; arg_values[1] = &arg2; // Invoke the function. ffi_call(&cif, FFI_FN(foo), &result, arg_values); // The ffi_arg 'result' now contains the unsigned char returned from foo(), // which can be accessed by a typecast. printf("result is %hhu", (unsigned char)result); return 0; } // The target function. unsigned char foo(unsigned int x, float y) { unsigned char result = x - y; return result; } SEE ALSO
ffi(3), ffi_prep_cif(3) February 15, 2008
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