I'm working with a binary search tree data structure to sort a series of structs with the type definitions:
typedef struct {
char c;
int index;
} data_t;
typedef struct node node_t;
typedef node {
void *data;
node_t *left;
node_t *right;
}
The node_t typedef is from a library provided to me for this purpose, presumably with a void* pointer to ensure polymorphism. node
will be passed into the function:
static void
*recursive_search_tree(node_t *root,
void *key, int cmp(void*,void*))
Within the recursive_search_tree function, I want to be able to modify the code to use the index element as a condition to find the match closest to the index of the linear pass over an array of characters, which would ultimately involve a data_t being passed into *key
and key->index
being accessed within the function.
The Question
Is it possible to access key->index
where key is a void*
pointing to a data_t
struct, or would this only be possible if data_t
was declared as the type for key? I have tried to do the latter, however even casting the pointer to an int doesn't seem to pass the compiler.
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