In this code:
bool delete(item* item)
{
item *cur = NULL;
the item
in the third line is taken to be the name of the variable item
(the parameter to the function), and not the type. Consequently, the third line looks as if it starts out as an expression that multiplies item
by the undefined variable cur
, which leads to problems; the rest of the expression is also bogus.
If this isn't what you want, don't use the same name for a type and a variable. You'll confuse other people even if you don't confuse yourself and the compiler.
Whichever reference source said that typedef
and #define
are 'the same' should be dropped from your list of references now! If it can't differentiate two such fundamentally different constructs, it is dangerous because you won't know when it is misleading you (but this is one case where it is misleading you).
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