10 KiB
[dcl.init.ref]
9 Declarations [dcl]
9.5 Initializers [dcl.init]
9.5.4 References [dcl.init.ref]
A variable whose declared type is âreference to Tâ ([dcl.ref]) shall be initialized.
[Example 1: int g(int) noexcept;void f() {int i; int& r = i; // r refers to i r = 1; // the value of i becomes 1int* p = &r; // p points to iint& rr = r; // rr refers to what r refers to, that is, to iint (&rg)(int) = g; // rg refers to the function g rg(i); // calls function gint a[3]; int (&ra)[3] = a; // ra refers to the array a ra[1] = i; // modifies a[1]} â end example]
A reference cannot be changed to refer to another object after initialization.
[Note 1:
Assignment to a reference assigns to the object referred to by the reference ([expr.assign]).
â end note]
Argument passing ([expr.call])and function value return ([stmt.return]) are initializations.
The initializer can be omitted for a reference only in a parameter declaration ([dcl.fct]), in the declaration of a function return type, in the declaration of a class member within its class definition ([class.mem]), and where theextern specifier is explicitly used.
[Example 2: int& r1; // error: initializer missingextern int& r2; // OK â end example]
Given types âcv1 T1â and âcv2 T2â, âcv1 T1â is reference-related to âcv2 T2â ifT1 is similar ([conv.qual]) to T2, orT1 is a base class of T2.
âcv1 T1â is reference-compatible with âcv2 T2â if a prvalue of type âpointer to cv2 T2â can be converted to the type âpointer to cv1 T1â via a standard conversion sequence ([conv]).
In all cases where the reference-compatible relationship of two types is used to establish the validity of a reference binding and the standard conversion sequence would be ill-formed, a program that necessitates such a binding is ill-formed.
A reference to type âcv1 T1â is initialized by an expression of type âcv2 T2â as follows:
is an lvalue (but is not a bit-field), and âcv1 T1â is reference-compatible with âcv2 T2â, or
has a class type (i.e.,T2 is a class type), where T1 is not reference-related to T2, and can be converted to an lvalue of type âcv3 T3â, where âcv1 T1â is reference-compatible with âcv3 T3â80 (this conversion is selected by enumerating the applicable conversion functions ([over.match.ref]) and choosing the best one through overload resolution),
then the reference binds to the initializer expression lvalue in the first case and to the lvalue result of the conversion in the second case (or, in either case, to the appropriate base class subobject of the object). [Note 2: The usual lvalue-to-rvalue, array-to-pointer, and function-to-pointer standard conversions are not needed, and therefore are suppressed, when such direct bindings to lvalues are done. â end note] [Example 3: double d = 2.0;double& rd = d; // rd refers to dconst double& rcd = d; // rcd refers to dstruct A { };struct B : A { operator int&(); } b; A& ra = b; // ra refers to A subobject in bconst A& rca = b; // rca refers to A subobject in bint& ir = B(); // ir refers to the result of B::operator int& â end example]
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Otherwise, if the reference is an lvalue reference to a type that is not const-qualified or is volatile-qualified, the program is ill-formed. [Example 4: double& rd2 = 2.0; // error: not an lvalue and reference not constint i = 2;double& rd3 = i; // error: type mismatch and reference not const â end example]
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Otherwise, if the initializer expression
is an rvalue (but not a bit-field) or an lvalue of function type and âcv1 T1â is reference-compatible with âcv2 T2â, or
has a class type (i.e., T2 is a class type), where T1 is not reference-related to T2, and can be converted to an rvalue of type âcv3 T3â or an lvalue of function type âcv3 T3â, where âcv1 T1â is reference-compatible with âcv3 T3â (see [over.match.ref]),
then the initializer expression in the first case and the converted expression in the second case is called the converted initializer. If the converted initializer is a prvalue, let its type be denoted by T4; the temporary materialization conversion ([conv.rval]) is applied, considering the type of the prvalue to be âcv1 T4â ([conv.qual]). In any case, the reference binds to the resulting glvalue (or to an appropriate base class subobject). [Example 5: struct A { };struct B : A { } b;extern B f();const A& rca2 = f(); // binds to the A subobject of the B rvalue. A&& rra = f(); // same as abovestruct X {operator B(); operator int&();} x;const A& r = x; // binds to the A subobject of the result of the conversionint i2 = 42;int&& rri = static_cast<int&&>(i2); // binds directly to i2 B&& rrb = x; // binds directly to the result of operator Bconstexpr int f() {const int &x = 42; const_cast<int &>(x) = 1; // undefined behaviorreturn x;}constexpr int z = f(); // error: not a constant expressiontypedef int *AP[3]; // array of 3 pointer to inttypedef const int *const ACPC[3]; // array of 3 const pointer to const int ACPC &&r = AP{}; // binds directly â end example]
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Otherwise, T1 shall not be reference-related to T2.
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If T1 or T2 is a class type, user-defined conversions are considered using the rules for copy-initialization of an object of type âcv1 T1â by user-defined conversion ([dcl.init], [over.match.copy], [over.match.conv]); the program is ill-formed if the corresponding non-reference copy-initialization would be ill-formed. The result E of the call to the conversion function, as described for the non-reference copy-initialization, is then used to direct-initialize the reference using the form (E). For this direct-initialization, user-defined conversions are not considered.
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Otherwise, the initializer expression is implicitly converted to a prvalue of type âT1â. The temporary materialization conversion is applied, considering the type of the prvalue to be âcv1 T1â, and the reference is bound to the result.
[Example 6: struct Banana { };struct Enigma { operator const Banana(); };struct Alaska { operator Banana&(); };void enigmatic() {typedef const Banana ConstBanana; Banana &&banana1 = ConstBanana(); // error Banana &&banana2 = Enigma(); // error Banana &&banana3 = Alaska(); // error}const double& rcd2 = 2; // rcd2 refers to temporary with type const double and value 2.0double&& rrd = 2; // rrd refers to temporary with value 2.0const volatile int cvi = 1;const int& r2 = cvi; // error: cv-qualifier droppedstruct A { operator volatile int&(); } a;const int& r3 = a; // error: cv-qualifier dropped// from result of conversion functiondouble d2 = 1.0;double&& rrd2 = d2; // error: initializer is lvalue of reference-related typestruct X { operator int&(); };int&& rri2 = X(); // error: result of conversion function is// lvalue of reference-related typeint i3 = 2;double&& rrd3 = i3; // rrd3 refers to temporary with value 2.0 â end example]
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In all cases except the last (i.e., implicitly converting the initializer expression to the referenced type), the reference is said to bind directly to the initializer expression.
[Note 3:
[class.temporary] describes the lifetime of temporaries bound to references.
â end note]
This requires a conversion function ([class.conv.fct]) returning a reference type.