This post is part of my C++ Guide for EOS developers

Basics Call by value / reference & Pointers Classes and Structs Templates Iterators Lambda Expressions Multi-index Header files

Call by value / reference

How arguments are passed to functions is an important concept in C++. This is often hard to understand for beginners, as you don’t have these different ways to pass arguments in languages like Java or JavaScript. You can pass arguments to a function with call by value or call by reference. The difference between them is that in call by value a copy of the actual argument is created and the called function operates on the copy. While, in call by reference, the location in memory (address) of the arguments is passed to the function. Meaning, the function will operate on the same, identical object and any modification on the object will, therefore, persist outside of the function call, as the changes are of course not reverted when the function returns. Let’s take a look at an example:

#include <iostream>



// this is call by value

// the integer x is copied and any modification is done on the copy

void test_by_value(int x) {

x = 1;

}



// call by reference is done using the `&` after the type

// no copy is created, behind the scenes the memory location is passed

// and the same number is used

void test_by_ref(int& x) {

x = 2;

}



int main() {

std::cout << "Hello World!

";

int number = 0;

test_by_value(number);

// outputs 0, number unchaged

std::cout << "test_by_value " << number << "

";



test_by_ref(number);

// outputs 2(!), number changed

std::cout << "test_by_ref " << number << "

";

}

Notice that the code for the caller is exactly the same no matter if you pass by value or by reference. The caller always just passes number . For call-by-reference, an ampersand & is used as an indicator in the function's argument list. The indistinguishability from the calling side makes it impossible to reason about whether your data was modified as parts of side effects of the function. The reason why C++ has these two types is C++'s default answer to questions: performance. Creating copies of big objects takes time and can be avoided by just reusing the existing object. You can disallow modifying the argument by declaring them as const :

int test_by_ref(const int& x) {

// this raises a compile time error now

// x = 2;



// reading is OK

return x + 2;

}

The same behavior applies not only to int but to all other data types ( string s, vector s) and class object.

It’s good practice to use call-by-reference because it’s usually more performant and to not modify the arguments by declaring them as const

For example, the Google C++ Style Guide states:

All parameters passed by reference must be labeled const.

In fact, it is a very strong convention in Google code that input arguments are values or const references while output arguments are pointers.

We understand values and const references now, so let's talk about what Google means with output arguments are pointers.

Pointers

Pointers are variables that store the memory address of another variable. They are heavily used in C as it doesn’t have call-by-reference. Instead, in C, you define a pointer variable that stores the memory location of your argument, and then pass this pointer variable by value.

Let’s have a look at how we would write our test function in C:

int number = 0;



// in C++

void test_by_ref(int& x) {

x = 2;

}

test_by_ref(number);



// in C

void test_by_pointer(int* px) {

// remember the value of px is the address of x

// to get the actual value of x we need to dereference the pointer by using `*`

*x = 2;

}



// pointers are defined by <type>*

// you get the address of a variable by using &

int* pnumber = &number;

test_by_pointer(pnumber);

// or without intermediate pointer variable

test_by_pointer(&number);

A pointer to an int variable is defined as int* , a pointer to a string would be defined as string* . The actual size of any pointer is however the same: sizeof(int*) == sizeof(string*) . Intuitively, pointers can be seen as a 32bit or 64bit, depending on the platform, unsigned int variables whose value is the memory address of another variable.

Why do we need to specify the type of the pointer ( int* or string* ) then?

Good question. The type becomes important when trying to access the value of the variable that the pointer points to. In our case, to get the value of number from our int* pnumber pointer, we need to dereference the pointer. This is done by the * operator on a pointer variable: int numberValue = *pnumber In order to know how many bytes the pointer should read, we need to define the type of the pointer.

For example, you could read the integer variable byte-by-byte by doing this:

uint32_t number = 0x01020304;

// we need to cast it to uint8_t* because &number is of type unit32_t*

// remember the pointers all have the same range as they all store memory addresses

uint8_t* p = (uint8_t*)(&number);

for(int i = 0; i < 4; i++) {

std::cout << "Byte " << i << ": " << std::to_string(*(p+i)) << "

";

}

As you can see, we can do calculations on pointers. This is called pointer arithmetic. Here, *(p+i) means move i times the size of the pointer type ( sizeof(uint8_t) ) ahead in the memory location of p and read an uint8_t .

Do we still need pointers in C++?

Although a lot can be done using easier references in C++, you 'll still frequently encounter pointers, for example, when using iterators or output parameters. Output parameters are like return values from the function, except that they are passed as a pointer argument and the referenced object is then modified in the function. Let's have a look at an example:

void split(const std::string &name, std::string *first, std::string *last)

{

std::size_t pos = name.find(" ");

*first = name.substr(0, pos);

*last = name.substr(pos + 1);

}

std::string name = "Dan Larimer";

std::string first, last;

split(name, &first, &last);

Here first and last are pointer output parameters containing the result of the computation after the split function is finished. Output parameters are generally used over real return arguments ( string split(...) { ... return <string> } ) when you need to return more than one value like two string s in our case.

Couldn’t we achieve the same by using references instead of pointers as output parameters?

Yes, we could rewrite the function to use reference output parameters instead:

void split(const std::string &name, std::string& first, std::string& last)

{

std::size_t pos = name.find(" ");

first = name.substr(0, pos);

last = name.substr(pos + 1);

}

std::string name = "Dan Larimer";

std::string first, last;

split(name, first, last);

What you prefer is up to you and comes down to personal style. One reason why the Google C++ Styleguide prefers pointers as output arguments is because it makes it clear at the caller site that the argument is potentially going to be mutated.

Nevertheless, it’s important to be able to read and understand both references and pointers.

You are probably confused by now with the many different ways to pass arguments to functions. That’s generally the biggest learning experience for developers new to C++, so don’t worry. At some point you’ll see the common, repeating patterns.