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C++ union in C#

Tags:

c++

c#

unions

I'm translating a library written in C++ to C#, and the keyword 'union' exists once. In a struct.

What's the correct way of translating it into C#? And what does it do? It looks something like this;

struct Foo {
    float bar;

    union {
        int killroy;
        float fubar;
    } as;
}
like image 278
Viktor Elofsson Avatar asked Sep 24 '08 12:09

Viktor Elofsson


3 Answers

You can use explicit field layouts for that:

[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Explicit)] 
public struct SampleUnion
{
    [FieldOffset(0)] public float bar;
    [FieldOffset(4)] public int killroy;
    [FieldOffset(4)] public float fubar;
}

Untested. The idea is that two variables have the same position in your struct. You can of course only use one of them.

More informations about unions in struct tutorial

like image 157
Armin Ronacher Avatar answered Nov 12 '22 23:11

Armin Ronacher


You can't really decide how to deal with this without knowing something about how it is used. If it is merely being used to save space, then you can ignore it and just use a struct.

However that is not usually why unions are used. There two common reasons to use them. One is to provide 2 or more ways to access the same data. For instance, a union of an int and an array of 4 bytes is one (of many) ways to separate out the bytes of a 32 bit integer.

The other is when the data in the struct came from an external source such as a network data packet. Usually one element of the struct enclosing the union is an ID that tells you which flavor of the union is in effect.

In neither of these cases can you blindly ignore the union and convert it to a struct where the two (or more) fields do not coincide.

like image 22
Steve Fallows Avatar answered Nov 13 '22 00:11

Steve Fallows


In C/C++ union is used to overlay different members in the same memory location, so if you have a union of an int and a float they both use the same 4 bytes of memory to store, obviously writing to one corrupts the other (since int and float have different bit layout).

In .Net Microsoft went with the safer choice and didn't include this feature.

EDIT: except for interop

like image 6
Nir Avatar answered Nov 12 '22 23:11

Nir