Name

const qualifier — Marks objects and functions as constant

Synopsis

               cv-qualifier ::= const | volatile
cv-qualifier-seq ::= const | volatile | const volatile | volatile const

The const keyword can be used as a qualifier when declaring objects, types, or member functions. When qualifying an object, using const means that the object cannot be the target of an assignment, and you cannot call any of its non-const member functions. When qualifying the target of a pointer, it means the destination cannot be modified. When member functions of a const object are called, this is a const pointer. When qualifying a member function, using the const qualifier means that within the member function, this is a const pointer to const, and the member function can be called for const objects. (Member functions without the const modifier cannot be called for a const object.)

When declaring pointers and references, be sure to distinguish between a const pointer (for which the pointer cannot be assigned, but what it points to can be modified) and a pointer to const (for which the pointer can be assigned, but what it points to cannot be modified).