I wonder which language allows you to change an argument's value? like: foo(&a) { a = 3 }
n = 1 print n foo(n) # passing in n, not &n print n and now n will be 3. I think C++ and PHP can let you do that, using their reference (alias) mechanism. And C, Python, and Ruby probably won't let you do that. What about Java and Perl? is there any way to prevent a function from changing the argument's value? isn't "what i pass in, the function can modify it" not a desireable behavior if i am NOT passing in the address of my argument? For one thing, if we use a module, and call some functions in that module, and the module's author made some changes to his code, then we have no way of knowing what we pass in could get changed. Of course, if it is in Java, Python, and Ruby, and we pass in a reference to object (not C+ +'s meaning of alias reference), so the object can get changed, but that can be expected, vs passing in n, when n = 1. Even when it is Ruby, when everything is an object, passing n in when n = 1 won't ever make n become 3. Is there a way to prevent it from happening in the languages that allows it? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list