If I have a class as follows
class Example_Class
{
private:
int x;
int y;
public:
Example_Class()
{
x = 8;
y = 9;
}
~Example_Class()
{ }
};
And a struct as follows
struct
{
int x;
int y;
} example_struct;
Is the structure in memory of the example_struct
simmilar to that in Example_Class
for example if I do the following
struct example_struct foo_struct;
Example_Class foo_class = Example_Class();
memcpy(&foo_struct, &foo_class, sizeof(foo_struct));
will foo_struct.x = 8
and foo_struct.y = 9
(ie: the same values as the x,y values in the foo_class) ?
The reason I ask is I have a C++ library (don't want to change it) that is sharing an object with C code and I want to use a struct to represent the object coming from the C++ library. I'm only interested in the attributes of the object.
I know the ideal situation would be to have Example_class wrap arround a common structure between the C and C++ code but it is not going to be easy to change the C++ library in use.
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