pack

Specifies packing alignment for structure, union, and class members.

#pragma pack( [ show ] | [ push | pop ] [, identifier ] , n  )

Remarks

pack gives control at the data-declaration level. This differs from compiler option /Zp, which only provides module-level control. pack takes effect at the first struct, union, or class declaration after the pragma is seen; pack has no effect on definitions. Calling pack with no arguments sets n to its default value. This is equivalent to compiler option /Zp8.

Note that if you change the alignment of a structure, the structure will not use as much space in memory, but you may see a decrease in performance or even get a hardware-generated exception for unaligned access. It is possible to modify this exception behavior with SetErrorMode.

  • show (optional)
    Displays the current byte value for packing alignment. The value is displayed by means of a warning message.

  • push (optional)
    Puts a specified packing alignment value, n, on the internal compiler stack, and sets the current packing alignment value to n. If n is not specified, the current packing alignment value is pushed.

  • pop (optional)
    Removes the record from the top of the internal compiler stack. If n is not specified with pop, then the packing value associated with the resulting record on the top of the stack is the new packing alignment value. If n is specified, for example, #pragma pack(pop, 16), n becomes the new packing alignment value. If you pop with identifier, for example, #pragma pack(pop, r1), then all records on the stack are popped until the record with identifier is found, and that record is popped and the packing value associated with the resulting record on the top of is the stack the new packing alignment value. If you pop with an identifier that is not found in any record on the stack, then the pop is ignored.

  • identifier (optional)
    When used with push, assigns a name to the record on the internal compiler stack. When used with pop, pops records off the internal stack until identifier is removed; if identifier is not found on the internal stack, nothing is popped.

  • n(optional)
    Specifies the value, in bytes, to be used for packing. The default value for n is 8. Valid values are 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16. The alignment of a member will be on a boundary that is either a multiple of n or a multiple of the size of the member, whichever is smaller.

    n can be used with push or pop for setting a particular stack value, or alone for setting the current value used by the compiler.

#pragma pack(pop,identifier, n) is undefined.

For more information on modifying alignment, see:

Example

The following sample shows how to the pack pragma to change the alignment of a structure.

// pragma_directives_pack.cpp
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdio.h>

struct S {
   int i;   // size 4
   short j;   // size 2
   double k;   // size 8
};

#pragma pack(2)
struct T {
   int i;
   short j;
   double k;
};

int main() {
   printf("%d ", offsetof(S, i));
   printf("%d ", offsetof(S, j));
   printf("%d\n", offsetof(S, k));

   printf("%d ", offsetof(T, i));
   printf("%d ", offsetof(T, j));
   printf("%d\n", offsetof(T, k));
}

0 4 8
0 4 6

The following sample shows how to use the push, pop, and show syntax.

// pragma_directives_pack_2.cpp
// compile with: /W1 /c
#pragma pack()   // n defaults to 8; equivalent to /Zp8
#pragma pack(show)   // C4810
#pragma pack(4)   // n = 4
#pragma pack(show)   // C4810
#pragma pack(push, r1, 16)   // n = 16, pushed to stack
#pragma pack(show)   // C4810
#pragma pack(pop, r1, 2)   // n = 2 , stack popped
#pragma pack(show)   // C4810

See Also

Reference

Pragma Directives and the __Pragma Keyword