1

Having following code:

 class X
    {
      public void Y(){}
    }


    X _x=new X();
    _x.Y();  //should I say Y is method of _x variable? It is easy but actually the variable contains just reference to object that has this method

   X newX=x;   //here I assign the value of variable x to variable newX. The value is reference 

3 Answers 3

1

In my most pedantic mood, I would write:

Y is a parameterless instance method declared in type X. It is invoked on the object referred to by the value of _x.

(_x itself is neither the object nor the reference - it's the variable.)

3
  • I am asking as in the book I currently read they often say: Use method XY of variable A.
    – Lojol
    Jan 19, 2011 at 14:52
  • In a mood even more pedantic than your most pedantic mood you would drop the () in Y(). :-)
    – jason
    Jan 19, 2011 at 14:53
  • @Lojol: It's not entirely unreasonable, so long as you know what they mean. I tend to be pedantic when I'm discussing the topic of exactly what happens as part of method invocation - but if I'm really only interested in (say) string manipulation, I won't be quite as precise with the terminology, as it ends up being more longwinded than it's worth.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jan 19, 2011 at 14:55
1

Usually it's not much of a problem because classes and variables have descriptive names, so it's pretty clear what's what.

An example using an actual class:

builder is a variable containing a reference to an instance of the StringBuilder class:

StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();

The Append method is a method in the StringBuilder class, not a method in the builder variable. You are calling the method on the instance that builder is referring to:

builder.Append("asdf");
1

Y is a pubilc instance method on the class X being invoked on the instance of the class X referred to by _x.

As an aside, an invocation like this is actually compiled as something like

call X::Y(_x)

This is because every instance-level method has an implicit first parameter that is a reference to the object that the method is being invoked on (this is how this refers to the right object).

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