Question

Are arrays passed by default by ref or value? Thanks.

Was it helpful?

Solution

They are passed as pointers. This means that all information about the array size is lost. You would be much better advised to use std::vectors, which can be passed by value or by reference, as you choose, and which therefore retain all their information.

Here's an example of passing an array to a function. Note we have to specify the number of elements specifically, as sizeof(p) would give the size of the pointer.

int add( int * p, int n ) {
   int total = 0;
   for ( int i = 0; i < n; i++ ) {
       total += p[i];
   }
   return total;
}


int main() {
    int a[] = { 1, 7, 42 };
    int n = add( a, 3 );
}

OTHER TIPS

First, you cannot pass an array by value in the sense that a copy of the array is made. If you need that functionality, use std::vector or boost::array.

Normally, a pointer to the first element is passed by value. The size of the array is lost in this process and must be passed separately. The following signatures are all equivalent:

void by_pointer(int *p, int size);
void by_pointer(int p[], int size);
void by_pointer(int p[7], int size);   // the 7 is ignored in this context!

If you want to pass by reference, the size is part of the type:

void by_reference(int (&a)[7]);   // only arrays of size 7 can be passed here!

Often you combine pass by reference with templates, so you can use the function with different statically known sizes:

template<size_t size>
void by_reference(int (&a)[size]);

Hope this helps.

Arrays are special: they are always passed as a pointer to the first element of the array.

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top