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Structures

C Language Structures & Unions 📅 May 2026 ⏱ 2 min read 🆓 Free

What is Structures?

Structures is an essential concept in C programming. It is part of the Structures & Unions section. Understanding this topic will make you a better programmer and prepare you for real-world applications, competitive exams, and job interviews.

Why You Must Learn This

  • Core concept in C — used in almost every real program
  • Essential for coding interviews and placement tests
  • Foundation for learning advanced C topics
  • Saves time and effort when you apply it correctly in projects

Key Concepts

ConceptDescription
PurposeFundamental building block in C programming
SectionStructures & Unions
LevelBeginner to Intermediate
PrerequisiteBasic C syntax and programming concepts
Used InReal applications, exams, interviews, projects

Example — Structures

c
#include <stdio.h>

int main() {
    // Structures
    int x = 10, y = 20;
    int result = x + y;
    printf("Structures example\n");
    printf("Result: %d\n", result);
    return 0;
}
▶ Output
Structures example
Result: 30

Step-by-Step Explanation

  1. Understand the definition and purpose of Structures
  2. Study the syntax and required structure
  3. Trace through the example code line by line
  4. Note the output and understand WHY it appears
  5. Modify the example to test your understanding
  6. Write 2-3 of your own programs using this concept

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Skipping practice — just reading code is NOT enough, you must type it yourself
  • Not understanding the logic — memorizing without understanding causes errors
  • Ignoring error messages — compiler/interpreter messages tell you exactly what is wrong
  • Not connecting Structures to other C concepts — see the big picture
💡 Tip: Practice Structures by solving at least 5 different programs. Use HackerRank, LeetCode, or GeeksforGeeks for extra practice problems on this topic.
📌 Note: This topic (Structures) is part of the Structures & Unions section in C. Once you master it, move to the next topic in the sidebar — topics build on each other.
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