Passing an array by reference
Sebastian Wright
How does passing a statically allocated array by reference work?
void foo(int (&myArray)[100])
{
}
int main()
{ int a[100]; foo(a);
}Does (&myArray)[100] have any meaning or its just a syntax to pass any array by reference?
I don't understand separate parenthesis followed by big brackets here. Thanks.
5 Answers
It's a syntax for array references - you need to use (&array) to clarify to the compiler that you want a reference to an array, rather than the (invalid) array of references int & array[100];.
EDIT: Some clarification.
void foo(int * x);
void foo(int x[100]);
void foo(int x[]);These three are different ways of declaring the same function. They're all treated as taking an int * parameter, you can pass any size array to them.
void foo(int (&x)[100]);This only accepts arrays of 100 integers. You can safely use sizeof on x
void foo(int & x[100]); // errorThis is parsed as an "array of references" - which isn't legal.
4It's just the required syntax:
void Func(int (&myArray)[100])^ Pass array of 100 int by reference the parameters name is myArray;
void Func(int* myArray)^ Pass an array. Array decays to a pointer. Thus you lose size information.
void Func(int (*myFunc)(double))^ Pass a function pointer. The function returns an int and takes a double. The parameter name is myFunc.
It is a syntax. In the function arguments int (&myArray)[100] parenthesis that enclose the &myArray are necessary. if you don't use them, you will be passing an array of references and that is because the subscript operator [] has higher precedence over the & operator.
E.g. int &myArray[100] // array of references
So, by using type construction () you tell the compiler that you want a reference to an array of 100 integers.
E.g int (&myArray)[100] // reference of an array of 100 ints
The following creates a generic function, taking an array of any size and of any type by reference:
template<typename T, std::size_t S>
void my_func(T (&arr)[S]) { // do stuff
} 1 Arrays are default passed by pointers. You can try modifying an array inside a function call for better understanding.
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