So kyler, you said "a stores a reference to a String object, not a value. String is not a primitive." That seems to imply that you think value implies primitive
I believe the fundamental problem here is the confusion between what a variables refers to and the usual definition of a "reference", the latter implying some sort of indirection
@barlop Under the hood, it's likely that an Object reference is just a value. It contains information that allows the running vm to point to an object. Practically, in Java you shouldn't think of it that way.
People try and explain the difference between pass by value and pass by reference by the concept of "values representing references" -- which is definitely the WRONG WAY to explain pass by reference
Because that whole fallacy of a concept of "value representing a reference" has been brought up by people unable to explain correctly the difference between pass by value/reference; that is why
The only thing which exists at the programmer level is a variable, and what that variable can represent depends only on the mechanisms available to the programming language
What I was asking originally, was this. What(in Java) is the difference between a reference and a pointer? (besides perhaps the fact that pointer is an actual memory location and a reference is not, since java has a VM)
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 ...
Dropping a note for @Unihedron ... I'm free for the next two weeks to get some shit done for JCE. Feel free to open up the repo on bitbucket for me: bitbucket.org/vogel612
What a language allows doing with variables of reference/pointer type depends on the language, so not all of those are relevant to java (null references are allowed, and variables of reference type can be reassigned, for instance)
@barlop there is no such thing as a pointer in Java, and that's about the end of it; that is, if you have a variable i, you can't do &i or *i like you can in C or C++
Whether that variable i is of a primitive type or anything Object
This has officially become my 4th circle of hell. Right above the "unending Coldplay on repeat" circle, but right below the "stuck on the It's a Small World" ride forever.
Since 8u60, .forEach() now will not remove the ORDERED characteristic of a Spliterator if it is ORDERED to begin with; as a result, .skip() will work "as expected" in this case