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  • "They take the form: typedef <existing type> <new type>;" - that's true for some types, but not all. Typedefs can get every bit as complex as any declaration: typedef int (*foo(void))[10]; creates a typedef named foo which is an alias for "function returning pointer to 10-element array of int". C declaration syntax is fairly complex, meaning typedefs can get pretty complex as well. Commented Aug 10, 2018 at 20:15