The code below compiles and runs just fine. Just when I thought I'm starting to get a decent grasp on rvalue reference and std::forward - this very simple code uncovers there is something very fundamental about rvalue I don't understand. Please clarify.
#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
using namespace std;
void fn( int&& n )
{
cout << "n=" << n << endl;
n = 43;
cout << "n=" << n << endl;
}
int main( )
{
fn( 42 );
}
I compile it with g++ 4.7 with the following command line:
g++ --std=c++11 test.cpp
The output is:
n=42
n=43
My main issue is where does the compiler store the 'n' within the function fn?