I'm going through some code that uses the new features of C# 7 and uses the ref locals & returns feature.
It seems pretty straight forward for value-types
where the ref local variable gets a reference (to the actual storage), and updating that updates the value of the original item.
A little explanation will help in understanding how memory references work in case of ref locals for the reference-types
. I'm pointing to the last line of the code below:
// A simple class
public class CoolClass
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public int Id { get; set; }
public CoolClass(string name, int id) => (Name, Id) = (name, id);
}
//Dummy method that returns first element with Id > 100
public CoolClass GetSpecialItem_Old(CoolClass[] arr)
{
for (int i = 0; i < arr.Length; i++)
if (arr[i].Id > 100)
{
return arr[i];
}
throw new Exception("Not found");
}
//Same as the other one, but returns by ref C# 7
public ref CoolClass GetSpecialItem_New(CoolClass[] arr)
{
for (int i = 0; i < arr.Length; i++)
if (arr[i].Id > 100)
{
return ref arr[i];
}
throw new Exception("Not found");
}
public void TestMethod()
{
var arr = new CoolClass[]
{
new CoolClass("A", 10),
new CoolClass("B", 101),
new CoolClass("C", 11)
};
var byVal = GetSpecialItem_Old(arr); //gets back arr[1]
byVal.Name = "byVal"; //arr[1] = { "byVal", 101 }
byVal = new CoolClass("newByVal", 25); //arr[1] = { "byVal", 101 }
ref var byRef = ref GetSpecialItem_New(arr); //gets back arr[1]
byRef.Name = "byRef"; //arr[1] = { "byRef", 101 }
//Here it has a different behaviour
byRef = new CoolClass("newByRef", 50); //arr[1] = { "newByRef", 50 }
}
ref var byRef
is basically the same reference toarr[1]
, so if youbyRef = new ...
you "actually" doarr[1] = new ...
under the hood.