You can certainly inline the comparison function, and a swapper for that matter. This code below is pretty basic and relies on valid pointers, but you'l get the idea. I also took the liberty of trimming down your quicksort, fixing what was off along the way (I hope).
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
// employee record
struct employee
{
char gender[12];
char name[12];
int id;
};
// swap employee records
void swap_employee(struct employee *left, struct employee *right)
{
struct employee tmp = *right;
*right = *left;
*left = tmp;
}
// compare employee records
int compare_employee(const struct employee* left,
const struct employee* right)
{
int gender = strcmp(left->gender, right->gender);
return (gender ? gender : (left->id - right->id));
}
// quicksort for employees
static void quicksort_(struct employee *arr, int left, int right)
{
struct employee p = arr[(left+right)/2]; // as good as any
int l = left, r = right; // movable indicies
while (l <= r)
{
while (compare_employee(arr+l, &p) < 0)
++l;
while (compare_employee(arr+r, &p) > 0)
--r;
if (l <= r)
{
swap_employee(arr+l, arr+r);
++l; --r;
}
}
if (left < r)
quicksort_(arr, left, r);
if (l < right)
quicksort_(arr, l, right);
}
// exposed API
void quicksort(struct employee *arr, int count)
{
if (arr && (count>0))
quicksort_(arr, 0, count-1);
}
/* sample usage */
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
struct employee arr[]=
{
{"male","Matt",1234},
{"female","Jessica",2345},
{"male","Josh",1235},
{"female","Betsy",2344},
{"male","Roger",1233}
};
quicksort(arr, sizeof(arr)/sizeof(arr[0]));
for (int i=0;i<sizeof(arr)/sizeof(arr[0]);++i)
printf("%s, %s, %d
", arr[i].gender,arr[i].name, arr[i].id);
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
Results
female, Betsy, 2344
female, Jessica, 2345
male, Roger, 1233
male, Matt, 1234
male, Josh, 1235