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Home/ Questions/Q 8128225
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 6, 20262026-06-06T07:48:29+00:00 2026-06-06T07:48:29+00:00

I understand the reference variable concept. It’s an alias to the other variable. int

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I understand the reference variable concept. It’s an alias to the other variable.

int varA = 100;
int &varB = varA;  

Here varB is a referring to varA, both pointing to same memory location. Changes to one variable reflect in the other.

Question:

  1. a) int &c = 100;
    What is the meaning of the above statement, and how does it differ from the following?
    b) int c = 100;

  2. Is there any scenario where we need to use 1(a) rather than 1(b)?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-06T07:48:31+00:00Added an answer on June 6, 2026 at 7:48 am

    All are correct, except this:

    int &c = 100; //error
    

    It will give compilation error both in C++03, and C++11. It is because it attempts to bind non-const reference to a temporary object (created out of 100) which is disallowed.

    In C++11, you could do this, however:

    int && c = 100; //ok
    

    It is called rvalue-reference.

    You could bind const reference to a temporary though (both in C++03, and C++11):

    int const & c = 100;
    

    –

    int c = 100;
    

    It simply defines an object called c and initializes it with 100. No reference here.

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