Structure variables can be passed to a function and returned in a similar way as normal arguments.
Passing structure to function in C++
A structure variable can be passed to a function in similar way as normal argument. Consider this example:
Example 1: C++ Structure and Function
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
struct Person {
char name[50];
int age;
float salary;
};
void displayData(Person); // Function declaration
int main() {
Person p;
cout << "Enter Full name: ";
cin.get(p.name, 50);
cout << "Enter age: ";
cin >> p.age;
cout << "Enter salary: ";
cin >> p.salary;
// Function call with structure variable as an argument
displayData(p);
return 0;
}
void displayData(Person p) {
cout << "\nDisplaying Information." << endl;
cout << "Name: " << p.name << endl;
cout <<"Age: " << p.age << endl;
cout << "Salary: " << p.salary;
}
Output
Enter Full name: Bill Jobs Enter age: 55 Enter salary: 34233.4 Displaying Information. Name: Bill Jobs Age: 55 Salary: 34233.4
In this program, user is asked to enter the name, age and salary of a Person inside main()
function.
Then, the structure variable p is to passed to a function using.
displayData(p);
The return type of displayData()
is void
and a single argument of type structure Person is passed.
Then the members of structure p
is displayed from this function.
Example 2: Returning structure from function in C++
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
struct Person {
char name[50];
int age;
float salary;
};
Person getData(Person);
void displayData(Person);
int main() {
Person p, temp;
temp = getData(p);
p = temp;
displayData(p);
return 0;
}
Person getData(Person p) {
cout << "Enter Full name: ";
cin.get(p.name, 50);
cout << "Enter age: ";
cin >> p.age;
cout << "Enter salary: ";
cin >> p.salary;
return p;
}
void displayData(Person p) {
cout << "\nDisplaying Information." << endl;
cout << "Name: " << p.name << endl;
cout <<"Age: " << p.age << endl;
cout << "Salary: " << p.salary;
}
The output of this program is the same as the program above.
In this program, we have created two structure variables p and temp of type Person
under the main()
function.
The structure variable p is passed to getData()
function which takes input from the user which is then stored in the temp variable.
temp = getData(p);
We then assign the value of temp to p.
p = temp;
Then the structure variable p is passed to displayData()
function, which displays the information.
Note: We don't really need to use the temp variable for most compilers and C++ versions. Instead, we can simply use the following code:
p = getData(p);