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I'm needing to return a reference to a private member of a Class I wrote. I'm doing it like this:

In MyClass2.h I have the following line

MyClass* getObj(){return &instance_myclass;}

I will make sure that my code does not change any value of instance_myclass. But just to make sure, is there a way to return this reference read only, so that I can't change its value? Or is this, by the definition, not possible?

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You do not currently return a reference but a pointer.

In order to return a reference, use:

MyClass& getObj() { return instance_myclass; }

If you want to prevent modifications via that reference, just make it const (and while you're at it, make the function const as well):

MyClass const& getObj() const { return instance_myclass; }
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  • And make that method const too :) Feb 6, 2016 at 10:10
  • Note that while making the method const is a good idea. It's not that it would help in hindering modification of the member - it's rather that you can call the method if the object itself is const declared.
    – skyking
    Feb 6, 2016 at 10:17
  • I've been reading because I honestly thought that reference and pointer were the same thing. Just to be clear instance_myclass is a pretty large data structure and I want to avoid copying it, while simply reading it. By returning a reference, I don't generate a copy of the variable right?
    – aarelovich
    Feb 6, 2016 at 10:19
  • @aarelovich: Pointers and references are very different things. Please read up on them in your book. Generally, you should not be afraid of returning large data structures by value; it's less error-prone and highly optimised, especially if you use standard-library containers. Feb 6, 2016 at 10:55
  • Ok. Thank you. I'll keep your recomendation in consideration.
    – aarelovich
    Feb 6, 2016 at 11:05

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