offsetof - cppreference.com (original) (raw)

| | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------- | | | | #define offsetof(type, member) /*implementation-defined*/ | | |

The macro offsetof expands to an integer constant expression of type size_t, the value of which is the offset, in bytes, from the beginning of an object of specified type to its specified subobject, including padding if any.

Given an object o of type type with static storage duration, &(o.member) shall be an address constant expression and point to a subobject of o. Otherwise, the behavior is undefined.

If the type name specified in type contains a comma not between matching parentheses, the behavior is undefined. (since C23)

[edit] Notes

If offsetof is applied to a bit-field member, the behavior is undefined, because the address of a bit-field cannot be taken.

member is not restricted to a direct member. It can denote a subobject of a given member, such as an element of an array member.

Even though it is specified in C23 that specifying a new type containing an unparenthesized comma in offsetof is undefined behavior, such usage is generally not supported even in earlier modes: offsetof(struct Foo { int a, b; }, a) generally fails to compile.

typeof can be used to avoid the bad effect of commas in the definition of a new type, e.g. offsetof(typeof(struct { int i, j; }), i) is well-defined. (since C23)

[edit] Example

#include <stdio.h> #include <stddef.h>   struct S { char c; double d; };   int main(void) { printf("the first element is at offset %zu\n", offsetof(struct S, c)); printf("the double is at offset %zu\n", offsetof(struct S, d)); }

Possible output:

the first element is at offset 0 the double is at offset 8

[edit] Defect reports

The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C standards.

DR Applied to Behavior as published Correct behavior
DR 496 C89 only structs and struct members were mentioned unions and other subobjects are also supported

[edit] See also