I'm looking at some C# code at the moment and I wanted to check that I'm not going nuts in my understanding of how it should be working.
It's to do with passing around a System.ServiceModel.Channels.Message. Every single method which takes a Message object has a method signature similar to this:
void SomeMethod(ref Message message) { ... }
What I don't understand is why the "ref" keyword is in there. As far as my understanding goes, if the method is not going to completely replace the object then it's not needed.
void SomeMethod(ref Message message)
{
message = new Message();
}
But if the message, for instance, just adds something else to the headers, or just reads a value from the object then the "ref" keyword is not needed as Message is a reference type.
void SomeMethod(Message message)
{
message.Headers.Add("Some Data"); // This should be fine?
}
Cheers
ref
parameter. Maybe some additional context would help.