I was searching for explanations over reference variables in c++ and I found this:
#include<iostream>
int a=10; //global 'a' so that fun doesn't return a reference of its local variable
int & fun();
int main()
{
int p = fun(); //line to be noted
std::cout << p;
return 0;
}
int & fun()
{
return a;
}
This worked and so does this:
#include<iostream>
int a=10; //global 'a' so that fun doesn't return a reference of its local variable
int & fun();
int main()
{
int &p = fun(); //line to be noted
std::cout << p;
return 0;
}
int & fun()
{
return a;
}
My question is how could an integer variable store the value of reference as is being done in first code snippet [line number 6]. Isn't the correct syntax as depicted in code snippet 2 [at line 6], i.e. we should define a reference variable (int &p) to carry the reference and not a regular integral variable? Shouldn't the compiler give an error or at least a warning? I am using GCC 4.7.1 64-bit.
athen re-printingpin both your examples.