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i know that gcnew is used to allocate managed memory. i also didn't find any System::String(System::String ^)constructor. normally if you want to copy a System::String class you will use something like

System::String ^s1 = gcnew System::String("a");
System::String ^s2 = System::String::Copy(s1);

but what about this?

System::String ^s1 = gcnew System::String("a");
System::String ^s2 = gcnew System::String(s1);
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    In .net the = assigns a new reference to existing object. String in .net are allo immutabile. So You need only string s1=s2 to copy. The only difference is if You use ReferenceEquals Vs Equals to compare them
    – alangab
    Oct 1, 2016 at 14:38
  • i can't find a reference for immutable. i think immutability is programmed and it is not a .net standard. Oct 1, 2016 at 14:51
  • 2
    System::String was carefully designed to ensure that copying is never necessary. None of its members allows altering the string content. The garbage collector ensures that one instance is always good enough to serve any need. Basic advantages are that you can always pass a string object to another method and be sure that it can never change. And that it is automatically thread-safe. And that it does not need a copy constructor. Oct 1, 2016 at 16:11
  • it is useful when you want to use pin_ptr<const wchar_t> to pin a small string that is a member of a class without pinning the whole class. you copy it and pin the copy string instead. this is why i am trying to find out if this code copies the string for me or just assigns the handles or it differs in different compilers. Oct 1, 2016 at 17:03
  • How does whether 1 or many other fields or variables refer to the same String object make a difference? Are you trying to break the immutability contract? Oct 2, 2016 at 14:17

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