What is the difference between ref and out parameters in .NET? What are the situations where one can be more useful than the other? Can anybody illustrate with a code snippet where one can be used and another can't?
|
|
They're pretty much the same - the only difference is that a variable you pass as an
|
|||
|
|
|
Example for OUT : Variable gets value initialized after going into the method. Later the same value is returned to the main method. namespace outreftry { class outref { static void Main(string[] args) { yyy a = new yyy(); ;
} Output: 10 =============================================== Example for Ref : Variable should be initialized before going into the method. Later same value or modified value will be returned to the main method. namespace outreftry { class outref { static void Main(string[] args) { yyy a = new yyy(); ;
} Output: 0
================================= Hope its clear now. |
||
|
|
|
|
[ref] and [out] both allow the called method to modify a parameter. The difference between them is what happens before you make the call.
Here's my favorite way to look at it: [ref] is to pass variables by reference. [out] is to declare a secondary return value for the function. It's like if you could write this:
Here's a more detailed list of the effects of each alternative: Before calling the method:[ref]: The called must set the value of the parameter before passing it to the called method. [out]: The caller method is not required to set the value of the argument before calling the method. Most likely, you shouldn't. In fact, any current value is discarded. During the call:[ref]: The called method can read the argument at any time. [out]: The called method must initialize the parameter before reading it. Remoted calls:[ref]: The current value is marshalled to the remote call. Extra performance cost. [out]: Nothing is passed to the remote call. Faster. Technically speaking, you could use always [ref] in place of [out], but [out] allows you to be more precise about the meaning of the argument, and sometimes it can be a lot more efficient. |
||
|
|
|
|
out and ref are exactly the same with the exception that out variables don't have to be initialized before sending it into the abyss. I'm not that smart, I cribbed that from the MSDN library :). To be more explicit about their use, however, the meaning of the modifier is that if you change the reference of that variable in your code, out and ref will cause your calling variable to change reference as well. In the code below, the ceo variable will be a reference to the newGuy once it returns from the call to doStuff. If it weren't for ref (or out) the reference wouldn't be changed.
|
||
|
|
|
|
This article has some good examples. The basic difference outlined is that out parameters don't need to be initialized when passed in, while ref parameters do. |
||
|
|
|
|
The ref keyword is used to pass values by reference. (This does not preclude the passed values being value-types or reference types). Output parameters specified with the out keyword are for returning values from a method. One key difference in the code is that you must set the value of an output parameter within the method. This is not the case for ref parameters. For more details look at http://www.blackwasp.co.uk/CSharpMethodParameters.aspx |
||
|
|
|
|
Why does C# have both 'ref' and 'out'?
So, These correspond closely to the |
|||
|
|
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
The out keyword causes arguments to be passed by reference. This is like the ref keyword, except that ref requires that the variable be initialized before it is passed. |
||
|
|
|
|
Ref parameters aren't required to be set in the function, whereas out parameters must be bound to a value before exiting the function. Variables passed as out may also be passed to a function without being initialized. |
||
|
|
|
|
ref will probably choke on null since it presumably expects to be modifying an existing object. out expects null, since it's returning a new object. |
||||||
|
