I was wondering... is there any real difference between:
for(auto &pointer : vectorOfPointers){pointer->fun();}
and
for(auto pointer : vectorOfPointers){pointer->fun();}
where vectorOfPointers
is declared as simple vector
of normal, old-school pointers:
std::vector<SomeType *> vectorOfPointers;
?
I know that &
in for(auto &o : objects)
stands for reference, while for(auto o : objects)
is the loop on the values. But the "values" in my examples are pointers themselves - I can access the objects to which they point and modify them with both loops.
So, is there any difference? If "not really" (in both the usage and in what the compiler would generate from them), maybe one of those 2 options is an commonly used/approved one?
Lets not add smart pointers to that discussion, I'm rather interested in that precise situation.
int
. Unfortunately, I am not 100% sure which talk it was, so no reference for that quote for now :(