What’s the difference between struct and class in .NET?
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In .NET, there are two categories of types, reference types and value types.
Structs are value types and classes are reference types.
The general difference is that a reference type lives on the heap, and a value type lives inline, that is, wherever it is your variable or field is defined.
A variable containing a value type contains the entire value type value. For a struct, that means that the variable contains the entire struct, with all its fields.
A variable containing a reference type contains a pointer, or a reference to somewhere else in memory where the actual value resides.
This has one benefit, to begin with:
Internally, reference types are implemented as pointers, and knowing that, and knowing how variable assignment works, there are other behavioral patterns:
When you declare variables or fields, here’s how the two types differ: