Coming from Delphi I am a bit confused about the syntax when dealing with procedure arguments specified as var...
In Delphi this is all taken care of by the compiler and the declaration of the procedure tells it how to deal with the arguments. Like so: procedure DoSomething(var Cnt: integer); called in FPC by: DoSomething(@MyCount); But in Delphi it is just: DoSomething(MyCount); OK, I can live with this, but next comes objects and dynamic arrays and such... When is it appropriate to use @ and when should it not be used? procedure SendData(var Buf: TBytes); procedure DigOutStuff(var MyCase: TCaseObject); Are these also called with @ or something else? I think that in Delphi it is enough to use the variable name in all cases. Is there an authoritative document describing this for FPC somewhere? My current case is sending data from a thread to an event in the main GUI app where the data are located in a TBytes object and I don't want to copy the data unneccesarily... I would like to supply the thread buffer to the event so that the event procedure can copy the data into a local array and process that. But if I declare the event procedure without using var I am afraid that just using the buffer as an argument will make the compiler *copy* the data into the call and then there will be two copy operations... -- Bo Berglund Developer in Sweden _______________________________________________ fpc-pascal maillist - fpc-pascal@lists.freepascal.org http://lists.freepascal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fpc-pascal