Liste des Groupes | Revenir à cl c |
Keith Thompson <Keith.S.Thompson+u@gmail.com> writes:
>Tim Rentsch <tr.17687@z991.linuxsc.com> writes:>
>Keith Thompson <Keith.S.Thompson+u@gmail.com> writes:>
>Kaz Kylheku <643-408-1753@kylheku.com> writes:>
>On 2024-07-12, bart <bc@freeuk.com> wrote:>
>It's clearly not by value. It's apparently not by reference. You>
can't get away with saying they are not passed, as clearly
functions *can* access array data via parameters.
Actually, you probably can get away with saying that it is "passed
by reference".
>
The formal term that doesn't apply is "call by reference"; that's
what C doesn't have.
>
"call by reference" emphasizes that the function call mechanism
provides the reference semantics for a formal parameter, not that
some arbitrary means of passage of the data has reference
semantics.
[...]
>
I know that "call by reference" is the usual formal term, but I
personally prefer "pass by reference".
>
The terms "call by reference" and "call by value" emphasize the
call, implying that all arguments in a given call are passed with
the same mechanism. In some languages that's true (C argument
passing is purely by value, and Fortran, as I understand it, is
purely by reference), but in others (C++, Pascal, Ada) you can
select by-value or by-reference for each parameter. "Pass by
(reference|value)" feels more precise.
>
I haven't checked, but I suspect the terms "call by (reference|value)"
predate languages that allowed the mechanism to be specified for each
parameter.
I suspect that your guess here is influenced more by what you would
like to be true than what is likely to be true.
I was influenced by what I thought made the most sense.
>What is likely to be true is that these terms entered the language>
at essentially the same time as the original Algol. Algol 60 has
both call by name and call by value, referred to by those names in
the Algol 60 Report, and selectable on a per-parameter basis.
>
By contrast the precursor to Algol 60, the International Algebraic
Language or IAL for short (and referred to after the fact as Algol
58) did not use either term, and described the coupling between
arguments and parameters only in somewhat vague English prose that
left unclear exactly what the binding mechanism(s) were to be.
(There was a description for functions and a separate description
for procedures, not quite the same, and both not completely clear
exactly what the mechanism was meant to be.)
>
Thus it seems likely that the terms call by name, call by value,
and perhaps other similar terms, first arose during the discussions
of the Algol 60 working group in the late 1950s, and entered the
general lexicon with or perhaps slightly before the publication of
the Algol 60 Report, which describes and allows both call by name
and call by value, selectable on a per-parameter base, and referred
to by those names in the published Algol 60 Report.
Yes, that does seem likely.
>
I'm mildly disappointed. Since arguments are *passed* and
functions/procedures are *called*, surely it would have made more sense
to use "pass by value" rather than "call by value", especially in a
language where the mechanism can vary per parameter.
All that is, I think, due to subsequent changes in (English) language
use. In Algol 60, procedures were invoked and /parameters/ were called
by value or name. Maybe the term was intended to reflect the idea that
the code in the body "called for the value" of the parameter.
>
The word "call" now refers, almost universally, to invoking a function
or procedure. As a result, the idea of "calling a parameter" reads
oddly, but at the time I'm sure it seemed perfectly reasonable.
(Yes, this is my opinion.)>
>
If there's some reason why "call by value" actually made more sense
than "pass by value", I'm not aware of it.
>
Since the phrase "pass by value" is now in common use, I'll
continue to use that term in preference to "call by value"
(likewise "by reference").
I use those terms too. It would be confusing these days to talk
about calling a parameter, and the phrase "call by value" suggests
(as it never did at the time) something so do with the function
calling mechanism in general.
This is compounded by the fact that modern programming languages
has almost universally settled on calling all parameters by value
(to the use the old phrase) so, usually, the terms can, in fact,
be used to talk about the function calling mechanism.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.