21

Is there any sense in defining a struct with a reference type member (and not defining it as a class)? For example, to define this struct:

public struct SomeStruct
{
    string name;
    Int32  place;
}

I asking because I know that a struct is a value type, and to define in it some reference type does not make any sense.

Am I right? Can someone explain this?

2
  • Uhm, the first thing I can say (it's my thought, maybe wrong, so excuse me) is that if you pass a value type to a function, you don't pass its reference as happens with reference types. In ths way you avoid that something around your app could modify your struct. I repeat, just a thought.
    – Marco
    Apr 11, 2011 at 11:58
  • If you pass a reference type to a function, you don't pass its reference either. Actually, you're passing a copy of the reference (if you don't use 'ref' or 'out').
    – sloth
    Apr 11, 2011 at 12:06

4 Answers 4

24

Nine times out of ten, you should be creating a class rather than a structure in the first place. Structures and classes have very different semantics in C#, compared to what you might find in C++, for example. Most programmers who use a structure should have used a class, making questions like this one quite frankly irrelevant.

Here are some quick rules about when you should choose a structure over a class:

  1. Never.
    ...Oh, you're still reading? You're persistent. Okay, fine.
  2. When you have an explicit need for value-type semantics, as opposed to reference type semantics.
  3. When you have a very small type (the rule of thumb is a memory footprint less than 16 bytes).
  4. When objects represented by your struct will be short-lived and immutable (won't change).
  5. And occasionally, for interop purposes with native code that uses structures.

But if you've made an informed decision and are truly confident that you do, in fact, need a structure rather than a class, you need to revisit point number 2 and understand what value type semantics are. Jon Skeet's article here should go a long way towards clarifying the distinction.

Once you've done that, you should understand why defining a reference type inside of a value type (struct) is not a problem. Reference types are like pointers. The field inside of the structure doesn't store the actual type; rather, it stores a pointer (or a reference) to that type. There's nothing contradictory or wrong about declaring a struct with a field containing a reference type. It will neither "slow the object" nor will it "call GC", the two concerns you express in a comment.

3
  • Sometimes it can make a good deal of sense to have a struct whose only field is a reference type. For example, suppose one had a collection which can be enumerated a number of different ways. A nice way to handle that is to define some structure types whose only content is a reference to the collection, and whose implementation of IEnumerable(of whatever) calls appropriate functions in the main class. One could then use foreach on something like "MyUserCollection.UserNames", where UserNames would be a single-item structure with a reference to the collection. No need to create a new GC object.
    – supercat
    May 10, 2011 at 19:10
  • 3
    When you have a very small type (the rule of thumb is a memory footprint less than 16 bytes). - could you describe why 16bytes? And actually why size matters?
    – dragonfly
    Aug 6, 2012 at 15:17
  • @dragonfly 16 bytes (or less) is the size recommended in the Microsoft design guidelines msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms229017.aspx. Presumably the stack works less effectively/efficently with bigger structs. Oct 23, 2013 at 21:13
4

Declaring a field of a reference type means there needs to be space to hold the value of the reference that is pointing to the target object. Thus it makes perfect sense to have such fields in structs.

3

In general, a struct should only contain a public and/or mutable field of a reference type if one of the following conditions applies:

  1. All instances of that type may be regarded as inherently immutable (as is the case of `string`)
  2. The semantics of the struct clearly imply that the field identifies the object to which it refers, rather than encapsulating its state, and that the state of the object referred to by the field is not considered part of the struct. For example, in a KeyValuePair<string, Form>, one would expect the `Value` to identify a form instance; moving the form around the screen would change `Value.Bounds`, but would not be considered to change `Value` (which would continue to refer to the same form, regardless of its on-screen location)

If neither condition applies, it may be appropriate for a structure to hold a field of a reference type provided all of the following conditions apply:

  1. The field never holds a reference to any mutable object which the struct did not itself create.
  2. The reference must never be exposed, nor ever have been exposed, to any code that might in future mutate the object it refers to.
  3. All mutations that are ever going to be done on the object to which the field is going to refer must be performed before a reference is stored in the field.

In other words, an object reference which is used to encapsulate the state of an object (as opposed to merely identifying it) should only be stored in a struct field if there is no execution path via which the object to which it refers might be modified.

2

I'm interested to hear what more experienced coders have to say about the pros and cons of this, but my understanding is that, as a value type, a variable of type SomeStruct would be allocated from the stack, but would contain a reference to the location on the heap containing the string.

6
  • 1
    SO i still dont see any sense to define the SomeStruct as struct and not as class - why do i want to have some pointer to heap in my struct ? its will slow the object and will call GC and this is not the main idea of using reference type
    – Yanshof
    Apr 11, 2011 at 12:00
  • 1
    @Yanshof One case where it's useful to have a reference inside a struct is when it points to a shared instance of the reference type. For example you could have UnitOfMeasure reference type with one instance per unit. And then use a struct to represent a number together with a unit. Apr 11, 2011 at 12:08
  • 1
    Value types aren't automatically allocated on the stack. It's just an implementation detail where it gets allocated (maybe the value type variable is a closed-over variable of a lambda method, or the value get's enregistered etc.)
    – sloth
    Apr 11, 2011 at 12:10
  • 1
    @Yanshof What does it mean to "slow an object"? What is the main idea of using a reference type in your opinion? Are you serious? I think you should read something about premature optimizations and about how data structures work. Apr 11, 2011 at 12:11
  • 2

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