why cannot assign to function call

Mark Wooding mdw at distorted.org.uk
Sat Jan 10 14:31:57 EST 2009


rurpy at yahoo.com <rurpy at yahoo.com> wrote:

> What is the observable difference between converting an
> array to a reference (pointer) to that array and passing
> the reference by value, and passing the array by reference?

For one:

#include <stdio.h>

static size_t foo(char v[]) { return sizeof v; }

int main(void)
{
  char v[sizeof(char *) * 10];
  
  puts(foo(v) == sizeof(char *) ? "pointer" : "reference");
  return (0);
}

For another:

static void bar(char v[]) { char ch = 0; v = &ch; }
  /* type error if arrays truly passed by reference */

> I guess the case for pass-by-value would be a little stronger because
> one has to have "passing a pointer by value" anyway (since pointers
> are first-class datatypes) and that can be used to describe passing
> arrays (as you described).

The difference is that the /callee/ function is different between the
two cases.

Also, notice that arrays in expressions turn into pointers in the same
way, so function argument passing works the same way as assignment -- a
hallmark of pass-by-value.

-- [mdw]



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