I am aware of out but this is a reference type.
It's not clear what you mean. out
isn't a type at all - it's a decorator for parameters. You can use it with reference types or value types:
// Nasty, but it does work...
void SplitInTwo(string input, out string x1, out string x2,
out int actualSplitCount)
{
string[] bits = input.Split('/');
x1 = bits[0];
x2 = bits[1];
actualSplitCount = bits.Length;
}
So you can use out
either way. However, I would strongly advise you not to do so. You can use the Tuple
family of types for ad hoc multiple values, but if the returned values are actually related, you should consider encapsulating them into a separate type, and returning a value of that type.
out
may be for reference types, but value types get boxed automatically into objects when used without
.object
. You can use value types directly forout
parameters and avoid boxing.The out keyword causes arguments to be passed by reference.
EDIT OHHH, they mean pass-by-reference, not pass-as-reference-type. My mistake! ;-)