I read that the main difference between a class and a structure is that class is reference type and structure is value type. can anybody explain me what does the value type and reference type means...?
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Classes can have a constructor and destructor while structures cannot.– ForceBruMar 16, 2015 at 16:12
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4I think you were reading about C#.– molbdniloMar 16, 2015 at 16:14
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2@ForceBru: A struct can have a constructor. stackoverflow.com/questions/1127396/struct-constructor-in-c– NathanOliverMar 16, 2015 at 16:15
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4@ForceBru: Complete and utter nonsense. In C++, at least.– Christian HacklMar 16, 2015 at 16:16
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1@ForceBru: Yet C does not have classes. So it's still nonsense.– Lightness Races in OrbitMar 16, 2015 at 16:38
3 Answers
You must be thinking of a different language. In C++, class types are semantically the same whether you introduce them with the class
or struct
keyword. They are object types (which one might loosely call "value types"), in the sense of being objects with a value representation.
The only difference is that base classes and members are public by default if you use struct
, and private if you use class
.
Reference types are denoted with &
or &&
, and can refer to any object or function type, not just classes.
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1@ChristianHackl: C++ defines semantics, not your heart. While I largely follow that convention, too, it's subjective and not at all close to being universally accepted. Mar 16, 2015 at 16:39
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1@ChristianHackl: "Semantically the same" is exactly the way to put it. They denote the same program behaviour (i.e. they have the same semantics), whether or not you read any extra meaning into the choice of keyword. Mar 16, 2015 at 16:43
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1@ChristianHackl: It will only give the wrong impression if you don't know what "semantically" means. Mar 16, 2015 at 16:59
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1@ChristianHackl: Well, again, that's not relevant to semantics :) Mar 16, 2015 at 17:04
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1@ChristianHackl: If you had no intention of entering into an argument about correct terminology, then beginning your feedback of this question with a criticism about terminology probably wasn't the smartest move ;) Mar 16, 2015 at 17:10
The only difference between class
es and struct
s is that by default members/bases are private
to a class
but public
to a struct
.
Now values and references are totally orthogonal concepts in C++ to class
/struct
, basically meaning instance of a class
/struct
and handle-to-instance.
In c++, the only differences between a struct and a class is the default member access and default inheritance:
struct A : BaseClassOrStruct { // public inheritance
int member; // public member
}
class A : BaseClassOrStruct { // private inheritance
int member; // private member
}
However, I usually do make a distinction between them: I use a struct to indicate that my objects really are just a collection of data members (that typically have public access) without methods (other than setters and getters).
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That's not the only difference. See the other answers and the duplicate. Mar 16, 2015 at 16:27
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@juanchopanza If you think its better now, you could undo your downvote ;) Mar 17, 2015 at 9:28