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I would like to model a group of items (people) where each individual has a set of unique characteristics... If I pass around my objects willy-nilly then copy constructors, etc. will cause my objects to diverge such that Object A will eventually have multiple different versions floating around, A` returned from method X, A`` returned from method Y and so forth. Which design pattern will help me ensure that if I pass around objects to various functions, that I'll be sure to always be acting on the unique representation of each given object. Thanks.

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    Just pass around smart pointers. 'nuff said Jan 17, 2013 at 16:26
  • You can protect classes against being copied and enforce pointer/reference semantics, as mentioned. Note also the existence of the convenience class boost::noncopyable Jan 17, 2013 at 16:31

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Either use smart pointers or just pass by reference. I'm not really sure what more advanced design pattern you're expecting to need.

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As others have said, pointers, smart pointers, or pass-by-reference.

If you're worried about forgetting, you can make the copy constructor private. That way, passing by value will be a compiler error.

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Just don't make copies of your objects. Store them all in a central location (using a container like std::vector or std::unordered_map) and then pass references to your various functions. For example:

void MutatePerson( Person& object );
void InspectPerson( const Person& object );

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