Declare a reference and initialize later?

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遥遥无期
遥遥无期 2020-12-01 05:58

I have a reference to MyOjbect, but the the exact object depends on a condition. So I want to do something like this:

MyObject& ref; 
if([co         


        
10条回答
  •  北荒
    北荒 (楼主)
    2020-12-01 06:26

    You can't do this. References must be bound to something, you may not like it but it prevents a whole class of errors, because if you have a reference you can always assume it's bound to something, unlike a pointer which could be null.

    Your example code wouldn't work anyway because you attempt to bind a non-const reference to a temporary object, which is invalid.

    Why do you need it to be a reference anyway? One solution would be to ensure your type has an inexpensive default constructor and can be efficiently moved, then just do:

    MyObject obj; 
    if([condition]) 
      obj = MyObject([something]) 
    else 
      obj = MyObject([something else]);
    

    Otherwise you'd have to put the conditional code in one or more functions, either:

    const MyObject& ref = createObject([condition]);
    

    or

    const MyObject& ref = [condition] ? doSomething() : doSomethingElse();
    

    Note that both these versions use a const reference, which can bind to a temporary, if the object must be non-const, then again stop trying to use a reference:

    MyObject obj = createObject([condition]);
    

    This will probably be just as efficient as what you were trying to do, thanks to the return value optimization

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