How to 'do' ByVal in C#
As I u开发者_JAVA百科nderstand it, C# passes parameters into methods by reference. In VB.NET, you can specify this with ByVal and ByRef. The default is ByVal.
Is this for compatibility with Visual Basic 6.0, or is it just random? Also, how can I specify what to use in C#? I kind of like the idea of passing parameters by value.
Parameters in C# are, by default passed by value. There is no modifier to make this explicit, but if you add ref
/ out
the parameter is by-reference.
The usual confusion here is the difference between:
- passing a value-type by value (changes to the value-type are not visible to the caller, but value-types should ideally be immutable anyway)
- passing a value-type by reference (changes to the value-type are visible to the caller, but value-types should ideally be immutable anyway - so important I'll say it twice ;p)
- passing a reference by value (changes to fields/properties of the ref-type are visible to the caller, but reassigning the ref-type to a new/different object is not visible)
- passing a reference by reference (changes to fields/properties, and reassigning the reference are visible to the caller)
Passing by value is the default in C#. However, if the variable being passed is of reference type, then you are passing the reference by value. This is perhaps the origin of your confusion.
Basically, if you pass a reference by value, then you can change the object it refers to and these changes will persist outside the method, but you can't make variable refer to a different object and have that change persist outside the method.
Parameters in C# are passed "ByVal" by default. You have to specify "ref" or "out" if you want different behavior.
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