I know references are syntactic sugar, so code is easier to read and write.
But what are the differences?
Summary from answers and links below:
A pointer can be re-assigned any number of times while a reference can not be re-seated after binding.
Pointers can point nowhere (NULL), whereas ...
@Morwenn This also sounds over-simplified to me. The one study I recall reading about this was much more restrained in its conclusions (to put it mildly). Let's see if I can find something.
"Children who had been exposed to starchy foods as infants were more likely to lick salt from the surface of food when they were preschoolers compared with children who didn't eat starchy foods as infants. However, children exposed to starchy food as infants did not actually prefer salty foods, such as pizza and French fries, more than children who were not exposed to starchy foods as infants[...]"
@Ven thanks a lot, i understood references better. those couple of comments you made previously was what i needed. "changing the value of a variable doesn't change its address"
Then the author of the article concluded: "Pass it on: Feeding babies salty foods may boost their preference for salt later in life." I suppose "may" covers a lot, but there seems to be little or nothing in the article or study to support this "conclusion".
It does appear that the ability to taste salt develops somewhat later than the ability to taste sugar. Given that salt is less crucial to survival than sugar, that's probably not much of a surprise.
@ArchbishopOfBanterbury I suppose it wouldn't have to be in the form of salt, but we clearly need sodium (and trying to consume anything like pure sodium would be...problematic, at best).
I don't get it. If I have A a1 = ...; A a2 = ...; and then I say a2 = a1; then the original a2 value is gone and a2 variable contains the same object as a1
@Shiro You should probably dig deeper than the surface syntax and really get to grips with what it means to define a variable. That's much more fundamental to understanding what is going on.
Soooo, the only operator= I've written by myself in my whole library were used to implement a couple of classes that could only be moved from each other.
are you guys seriously whining about operator=? get over it
when you base a language on a language based on assembly language, you get micromanagement. operator= lets you encapsulate some of it. what is the problem?
550 lines of SFINAE overloads of the same trivial function hidden in at least three times in 15 layers of abstraction and the thing still works. I'm honestly surprised things still work whenever I compile my testsuite.
@Shoe well, we don't pick opponents, matchmaking does. We faced guys from silver, gold and platinum, but their league doesn't really reflect their skill