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Lära References | References & Pointers
C++ Intermediate | Mobile-Friendly
course content

Kursinnehåll

C++ Intermediate | Mobile-Friendly

C++ Intermediate | Mobile-Friendly

1. Data Types and Arrays
2. References & Pointers
3. Dynamic Memory
4. Functions

book
References

The reference is the variable that stores the address of certain data. References have many familiar features with pointers. Here I will show how references work and the difference between them and pointers. Let’s start by creating. To declare the reference use the ampersand &:

python

The reference also has its name and type, but it doesn’t need to get the address of the variable using the additional operator &. Nevertheless, in both cases, we assign the address of the variable a to another variable (pointer or reference):

If we want to print created pointer and reference, we will get the following:

12
cout << pa << endl; cout << ra << endl;
copy

By outputting the reference, we got the value it stores since references immediately work with the value they point to. You cannot just add the asterisk * to the reference (like with pointers) to get the address, as such syntax will cause an error.

Pay attention that you cannot declare the reference without the variable it will point to.

python
question-icon

Declare the reference rx:

string ;

Click or drag`n`drop items and fill in the blanks

Var allt tydligt?

Hur kan vi förbättra det?

Tack för dina kommentarer!

Avsnitt 2. Kapitel 6

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Fråga vad du vill eller prova någon av de föreslagna frågorna för att starta vårt samtal

course content

Kursinnehåll

C++ Intermediate | Mobile-Friendly

C++ Intermediate | Mobile-Friendly

1. Data Types and Arrays
2. References & Pointers
3. Dynamic Memory
4. Functions

book
References

The reference is the variable that stores the address of certain data. References have many familiar features with pointers. Here I will show how references work and the difference between them and pointers. Let’s start by creating. To declare the reference use the ampersand &:

python

The reference also has its name and type, but it doesn’t need to get the address of the variable using the additional operator &. Nevertheless, in both cases, we assign the address of the variable a to another variable (pointer or reference):

If we want to print created pointer and reference, we will get the following:

12
cout << pa << endl; cout << ra << endl;
copy

By outputting the reference, we got the value it stores since references immediately work with the value they point to. You cannot just add the asterisk * to the reference (like with pointers) to get the address, as such syntax will cause an error.

Pay attention that you cannot declare the reference without the variable it will point to.

python
question-icon

Declare the reference rx:

string ;

Click or drag`n`drop items and fill in the blanks

Var allt tydligt?

Hur kan vi förbättra det?

Tack för dina kommentarer!

Avsnitt 2. Kapitel 6
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