I keep getting the same issue over and over again where an object I want to reference is copied or where an object I want to copy is referenced. This happens when I use the = operator.

For example, if I am sending the object to another form, ie:

SomeForm myForm = new SomeForm();
SomeObject myObject = new SomeObject();
myForm.formObject = myObject;

...and then modify the object in the form, the original object does not get modified. It is as if the object was copied and not referenced. Yet, when I do this:

SomeObject myObject = new SomeObject();
SomeObject anotherObject = new SomeObject();
anotherObject = myObject;

...and then modify anotherObject, myObject gets modified as well.

The most aggravating case is when I try to Clone one of my defined objects:

public class SomeObject
{
    double value1, value2;

    //default constructor here

    public SomeObject(val1, val2)
    {
        value1 = val1;
        value2 = val2;
    }

    public void Clone(SomeObject thingToCopy)
    {
        this.value1 = thingToCopy.value1;
        this.value2 = thingToCopy.value2;
    }
}

when I do this...

SomeObject obj1 = new SomeObject(1, 2);
SomeObject obj2 = new SomeObject();
obj2.Clone(obj1);

...obj1 is referenced and any modifications to obj2 changes obj1.

System objects such as int, double, string, etc seem to always be copied, except for in the case of the clone method above.

My question is, not taking into account the use of the ref keyword in functions, when does an object get copied and when does an object get referenced in every case of the matter (i.e. when passing to functions, when setting as other objects (like the first two above examples), when copying member variables like the third example, etc.)?

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4 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

It's hard to answer this sort of question precisely without spending an awful lot of time picking your words carefully.

I've done so in a couple of articles which you may find useful:

That's not to say that the articles are perfect, of course - far from it - but I've tried to be as clear as I can.

I think one important thing is to separate the two concepts (parameter passing and reference vs value types) out in your head.

To look at your specific examples:

SomeForm myForm = new SomeForm();
SomeObject myObject = new SomeObject();
myForm.formObject = myObject;

This means that myForm.formObject and myObject refer to the same instance of SomeObject - like two people having separate pieces of paper, with each one having the same address written on them. If you go to the address on one piece of paper and paint the house red, then go to the address on the second piece of paper, you'll see a red house.

It's not clear what you mean by "and then modify the object in the form" because the type you have provided is immutable. There's no way of modifying the object itself. You can change myForm.formObject to refer to a different instance of SomeObject, but that's like scribbling out the address on one piece of paper and writing a different address on it instead. That won't change what's written on the other piece of paper.

If you could provide a short but complete program whose behaviour you don't understand (ideally a console application, just to keep things shorter and simpler) it would be easier to talk about things in concrete terms.

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I will have to write one. I understand pointers for the most part from C++, I just don't understand when they are used in relation to value and reference types in C# as there is no explicit "safe" pointer usage/operators in C#. – Mike Webb Dec 3 '10 at 17:36
1  
I will write the program later as now I am at work. Thank you for the help. I will read the articles as well. – Mike Webb Dec 3 '10 at 17:37
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.NET makes a very clear distinction between Value Types and Reference Types.

Instances of value-types are copied by-value, with the exception of ref parameters.

All instances of reference-types are only copied by reference.

And your example, class SomeObject, is a reference type. All classes are. obj1 and obj2 are the references. They behave exactly like value types, but their content is a reference to an object.

An instance of a reference type (class object, array) is always anonymous, is created on the Heap and is always passed/copied by reference.

The built-in base types (except string and object) are all value types and so are structs and enums.

As Jon Skeet notes the whole thing could be described better but a Picture is really essential. I couldn't find a good one so I'll try a little ASCII art:

---------        --------------
| obj1 -+------> | <instance> |
---------        -------------- 

The point is that when using an object (reference type) you are always dealing with 2 'entities' : the named reference and the anonymous object/instance.

Speaking formally, you cannot copy/pass/assign objects at all (but we often talk like we can). You can only copy/pass/assign the references, and they behave exactly like value types. So you could pass a reference by 'ref'.

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To make things clearer: Reference types (Pointer-like assignation) are Classes, Arrays and Interfaces, whilst Value types (Copy assignation) are Numeric types, char, boolean, structs and emums. Hope it helps ;) – Drknezz Dec 3 '10 at 17:03
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Your answer appears to imply that using "ref" makes no difference for reference types... which isn't true. – Jon Skeet Dec 3 '10 at 17:04
@Jon: I didn't mean to imply that, I have added some info since. – Henk Holterman Dec 3 '10 at 17:08
I still disagree with your claim that "an instance of a reference type is always passed by reference". I'd argue that as the value of an expression is never an instance of a reference type, it's not passed at all. The reference is passed by value by default. I think it's easier to have a consistent view on things when you differentiate very clearly between "the type of thing being passed" and the passing mechanism. Both reference types and value types behave the same way then, for argument passing: by default, the value of the argument is copied into the initial value of the parameter. – Jon Skeet Dec 3 '10 at 17:13
@Henk - Then why does string1 = string2; always seem to copy them by value instead of by reference? Also, if value types are always copied by value, why does copying the value types in one class to another class, like my "Clone" example above result in a copy-by-reference of the original object? – Mike Webb Dec 3 '10 at 17:14
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Hi Mike All objects, which derives from ValueType, such as struct or other primitive types are value types. That means that they are copied whenever you assign them to a variable or pass them as a method parameter. Other types are reference types, that means that, when you assign a reference type to a variable, not it's value, but it's address in memory space is assigned to the variable. Also you should note that you can pass a value type as a reference using ref keyword. Here's the syntax

public void MyMethod(ref int a) { a = 25 }
int i = 20;
MyMethod(ref i); //Now i get's updated to 25.

Hope it helps :)

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Sorry to nitpick here. Objects do not derive. Types do. Object is generally the term used to describe an instance of a type. – Brian Rasmussen Dec 3 '10 at 17:07
You can pass an argument by reference using ref, but that's not the same as passing it as a reference. I think it's worth differentiating between the two. – Jon Skeet Dec 3 '10 at 17:14
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With regards to cloning your objects if the values you are copying from one object to another are reference types then any modification to those values in the original object will affect the values in the copied object (since they are just references to the same object)

If you need to clone an object which has properties which are reference types you need to either make those types clonable or do a manual copy of them by instantiating new instances as required.

Conside using the IClonable interface though it isn't the best of solutions imho.

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