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my gut feeling says I shouldn't do the following. I don't get any warnings about it.

void test(DateTime d)
{
 d = d.AddDays(2);
//do some thing with d
 }

or is this more proper

 void test(DateTime d)
 {
 DateTime _d = d.AddDays(1);
//do some thing with _d
 }

For some reason I have always handled passed parameters like in the second example. But I am not sure if it's really nessesry...maybe it's just unnessary code.

I am not thinking that the calling method would be using the modified value. anyone have any opinions

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Changes to the value of a parameter are invisible to the caller, unless it's a ref or out parameter.

That's not the case if you make a change to an reference type object referred to by a parameter. For example:

public void Foo(StringBuilder b)
{
    // Changes the value of the parameter (b) - not seen by caller
    b = new StringBuilder();
}

public void Bar(StringBuilder b)
{
    // Changes the contents of the StringBuilder referred to by b's value -
    // this will be seen by the caller
    b.Append("Hello");
}

Finally, if the parameter is passed by reference, the change is seen:

public void Baz(ref StringBuilder b)
{
    // This change *will* be seen
    b = new StringBuilder();
}

For more on this, see my article on parameter passing.


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