Given that this is a stylistic question, it's going to provoke some subjective responses, including mine. :-)
There are procedural languages out there that do require that function parameters are defined as being input or output. In C++, that's largely unnecessary.
The general mindset that a modern C++ developer should have is one that focuses more on mutable vs. immutable, and interfaces over raw types and data.
When we look at a function like this:
void f(int x);
... a C++ developer can tell you at a glance that 'x' is used for input. Why? It's being passed by value. There is no way to modify 'x' in a way that has any impact on the caller and thus any argument passed to this function is not going to be modified.
That's also true of any const reference:
void f(const Foo& read_only_foo);
The above is definitely a strict input parameter. When we look at a function like this:
void f(int& x);
We can generally assume that f
is going to modify x
(it's not guaranteed, but knowing what f
does should clear any doubt).
With user-defined types, it becomes a bit more hazy.
ostream& operator<<(ostream& os, const Foo& foo);
Here we know for sure that 'foo' is an input parameter since it is immutable. But what about 'os'? Is it an output parameter, input, both? In strict procedural languages, an output parameter would generally imply that the parameter will be changed, but we're also reading from it here, so it would be both. While we will be invoking methods in 'os' that have an effect on its state, it's not exactly the way we think of an output parameter in the procedural languages that support in/out parameters natively.
The point is that this strict I/O way of thinking about parameters can get downright confusing with these kinds of high-level interfaces and object-oriented design. A more useful way to look at things here tends to be whether the object implementing the interface is mutable or immutable. Here, 'os' is mutable. The function is generally saying that it's going to be invoking some functions that modify its state.
How about this?
// fills the specified list with stuff
void some_list(list<int>& out_list);
Here it tends to go along, perhaps more naturally, with the sort of semantics we expect of an output parameter. With something like filling a list, we tend to think of it more intuitively as the function outputting a result through the list. I even prefixed the name with 'out' to emphasize that. But actually, and especially with C++11, we shouldn't be writing such things as Stroustrup emphasizes:
// returns a new list filled with stuff
list<int> some_list();
That actually leaves very few places left where the in/out distinction could be arguably very useful at all (and not redundant with the means already provided to mark parameters as mutable/immutable, by value, reference, pointer, or r-value reference).
Combined with clear documentation about what the function is doing, there is generally no ambiguity about how it works with its parameters, so in/out conventions tend to do very little but add a lot of extra code, and may promote a more data-oriented mindset which you should be trying to get away from.
All in all, I'd suggest trying to avoid this convention all together. Even if there are good arguments in favor of it, it's just not what people tend to do in C++. And if you want people to enjoy working with your code and not getting frustrated, you have to learn to go along with what the common masses tend to understand and like. Anything too exotic will frighten people away.
If you're absolutely, fanatically attached to designating everything as being in or out, I recommend a minimally intrusive solution like a documentation style or naming convention. Definitely avoid macros that do nothing. That will require your readers to check every time that these macros do, indeed, do nothing. A naming convention or documentation style requires no such checking.
Finally, a little quote from the creator of C++ himself:
The first rule about macros is: Don't use them unless you have to.
Almost every macro demonstrates a flaw in the programming language, in
the program, or in the programmer. -- Bjarne Stroustrup
OUT
? Almost all function arguments areIN
types. Anyway, you can go a long way by using descriptive function names and avoid returning things in arguments. When all else fails, using a type and not a lexical indicator is probably better. (That is, write a utility type that requires the user of the function to typeAdd(1, 2, out(x))
, whereout
returns some reference wrapper.)Result
).int
parameters can only be IN parameters. Since the Result is not taggedconst
, it is probably an OUT parameter (or an INOUT parameter). The comments provide little benefit; they are noise.