C++ Tutorial
C++ References
A
reference variable is an alias, that is, another name for an already existing
variable. Once a reference is initialized with a variable, either the variable name
or the reference name may be used to refer to the variable.
C++ References vs
Pointers:
References
are often confused with pointers but three major differences between references
and pointers are:
·
You cannot have NULL references. You must always be able to assume
that a reference is connected to a legitimate piece of storage.
·
Once a reference is initialized to an object, it cannot be changed
to refer to another object. Pointers can be pointed to another object at any
time.
·
A reference must be initialized when it is created. Pointers can
be initialized at any time.
Creating References in
C++:
Think of a
variable name as a label attached to the variable's location in memory. You can
then think of a reference as a second label attached to that memory location.
Therefore, you can access the contents of the variable through either the
original variable name or the reference. For example, suppose we have the
following example:
int i = 17;
We can
declare reference variables for i as follows.
int& r = i;
Read the
& in these declarations as reference.
Thus, read the first declaration as "r is an integer reference initialized
to i" and read the second declaration as "s is a double reference
initialized to d.". Following example makes use of references on int and
double:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main ()
{
// declare simple variables
int i;
double d;
// declare reference variables
int& r = i;
double& s = d;
i = 5;
cout << "Value of i : " << i << endl;
cout << "Value of i reference : " << r << endl;
d = 11.7;
cout << "Value of d : " << d << endl;
cout << "Value of d reference : " << s << endl;
return 0;
}
When the
above code is compiled together and executed, it produces the following result:
Value of i : 5
Value of i reference : 5
Value of d : 11.7
Value of d reference : 11.7
References
are usually used for function argument lists and function return values. So
following are two important subjects related to C++ references which should be
clear to a C++ programmer:
Concept
|
Description
|
References as
parameters
|
C++ supports passing references as
function parameter more safely than parameters.
|
Reference as return value
|
You can return reference from a C++
function like a any other data type can be returned.
|
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