I come from a C++ background and am trying to become proficient in C#. It seems like C# always has 2 types of modifiers wherever C++ had one. For example, in C++ there is &
for references and then in C# there is ref
and out
and I have to learn the subtle differences between them. Same with readonly
and const
, which are the topic of this thread. Can someone explain to me what the subtle differences are between the 2? Maybe show me a situation where I accidentally use the wrong one and my code breaks.
1 Answer
Readonly: Can only be set in the constructor.
Const: Is a COMPILE TIME CONSTANT. I.e. can not be determined at runtime.
const_cast<>
is provided by the language. And why it had to add themutable
keyword later. All hacks around the not-so-great const keyword, hacks that the C# designers were well aware of.?:
and??
when simpleif
is enough, multiple ways to represent delegates,.. Note that while asking for "why feature X is designed in language in particular way" are on-topic such post should show reasonable understanding/research about feature to stay on its own. In current state of the question it clear duplicate due to just asking about differences.