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Does a reference have a storage location or is it just an alias for another location? Does this differ by C++ revision or is it consistent with all versions of C++? And if a reference has a storage location, does it then just allow value semantics on a pointer like type?

How would a reference work when you use it as such:

struct aStruct{
   int aVariable;
   aClass& aReferencetoaClass;
};

Does it take up space or is it an alias?

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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The latest C++20 spec(§ 9.2.3.3) and at least since the C++ 2005 draft spec state:

It is unspecified whether or not a reference requires storage

The actual implementation is on a case-by-case basis. Obviously if a class has a single member variable that is a reference that will need to be stored somewhere. But the compiler has leeway when to use a reference solely as an alias, as you put it.


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