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Is this a CLR restriction or a language design decision? I tried to do it in C++/CLI, of course where it works because the need to support native c++:

public ref class Test
    {
    	public:
    	static Test^ operator &( Test^ msg, int& i )
    	{
    		i = i + 1;

    		return nullptr;
    	} 
    };

and then looked at the compiler omitted output:

public: static Test __gc* op_BitwiseAnd(Test __gc* msg, Int32 __gc** modopt(IsImplicitlyDereferenced __gc*) i)
{
    i[0] += 1;
    return 0;
}

I went further and tried to call this operator from C# project - and of course I needed to go [unsafe] to do it( I needed pointer ):

Test t = new Test();
int i = 0;

unsafe
{
    t = t & &i;
}

Obviously not so hard to implement for the CLR? I really miss pass by reference in operators overloading and would like to at least in light myself in why is this missing?

Why can't C# hide the ugliness behind the unsafe and pointers when we need to deal with reference variables in our operator overloads? Even if I chose to go with this ugly workaround it wouldn't work in Silverlight, where unsafe operations is not allowed...

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2 Answers

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In C#, your variables are never altered by callees without you explicitly passing them as references (e.g. int.TryParse(s, out i) where you explicitly specify the out keyword). This feature would make things complicated by allowing the overloaded operator alter the contents of the operands without your explicit permission.

For instance,

public static MyStruct operator + (ref MyStruct left, ref MyStruct right) {
    left = new MyStruct(); // !!!!!!!!
    return something(left, right);
}

When you reference such an operator in C#:

MyStruct x = new MyStruct();
MyStruct y = new MyStruct();
MyStruct z = x + y; // in C#, you never expect `x` to be changed.
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Not at all. Just make operator overloading to take ref parameter? – Ivan Zlatanov Oct 31 at 16:10
Ivan: then how you'd call the overloaded operator? If a method takes a ref parameter, the call site and the definition site should explicitly declare the parameter as ref. – Mehrdad Afshari Oct 31 at 16:11
Mehrdad: This is perfectly OK. They have different signature, so calling without ref will never match a ref overload. What is so complicated about that, that made C# team not implement it? What if I really need to alter a operand that is not a reference type - how do I do it? – Ivan Zlatanov Oct 31 at 16:17
2  
Ivan: C# is designed not to clone C++ complexities. "What if I really need to alter a operand that is not a reference type - how do I do it?" First, if you really need it, you should create a method, not an operator for that purpose. You are abusing operator overloading. Second, what if the callee isn't conscious of your decision and suddenly sees his variable modified in an expression? This will cause headaches in debugging. – Mehrdad Afshari Oct 31 at 16:19
1  
"What if I really need to alter a operand that is not a reference type - how do I do it?" Use a method instead. I don't think there is ever a situation where you really need an operator, specifically, that works this way. – Joren Oct 31 at 16:19
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I think it is because an operator (in the more mathematical view that C# seems to take) is logically something that combines its arguments into a new value, never supposed to be mutating anything. C++ seems to consider operators more as a version of general operations with more convenient syntax than functions, than as a way to represent maths in particular. I think that in C# you'll almost never see things like defining operators for stream operations and such.

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