0

I've seen the following in legacy code:

public void someFunction(List myList){
List myList2 = myList;
}

Is there a good reason to re-assign parameters as local variables in a function?

3
  • This looks like Java or C#, so it must be some pretty new "legacy code"!
    – anon
    Jul 16, 2009 at 18:46
  • @Neil: the "legacy" label sticks pretty quickly, and Java is 14 years old. Jul 16, 2009 at 18:50
  • Yes, it's java code. Thanks for all the answers! :)
    – Tamar
    Jul 16, 2009 at 18:59

4 Answers 4

1

Not really. Aliasing or reuse of names should be avoided, in my opinion.

1

Could be a personal style. Or a failed attempt to create a new reference? I am pretty sure as-is the compiler discards myList2 in favor of myList.

0
0

It depends on the language. In some cases, you may want to make changes to the "copy" later on - and in some languages/situations changing the original parameter will make changes to what the caller sees.

If you could say which language you're talking about (Java?) and give a concrete example, that would help us to explain.

0

There's no good reason to do this, with pass-by-value parameters. This looks like a not-quite-fluent developer, recalling that another language he's worked with bit him if he didn't work on copies of his parameters.

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