I was reading the C++ FAQ - "8.6 - When should I use references, and when should I use pointers?" and in particular this statement:
Use references when you can, and pointers when you have to.
...
The exception to the above is where a function's parameter or return value needs a "sentinel" reference — a reference that does not refer to an object. This is usually best done by returning/taking a pointer, and giving the NULL pointer this special significance (references must always alias objects, not a dereferenced NULL pointer).
From what I've seen, the need for a "sentinel" reference is indeed often the reason to use pointers instead of references. What I'm wondering is: why doesn't C++ have a special "NULL value" for references? It seems it would make pointers almost unnecessary, which would solve many problems.
So why wasn't it part of the language specification?
Edit:
I'm not sure my question is clear - I guess I'm not asking litterally about NULL references. Most often I read that in C++ "the reference is the object". And, in most OOP languages, objects can be NULL - Pascal, C#, Java, JavaScript, PHP, etc. in all these you can do someObject = null
or someObject := nil
. In fact, Pascal also supports pointers but still allows objects to be nil
, since it has its use. So why is C++ somehow special and doesn't have a NULL object? Was it just an overlook or an actual decision?