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c++ - Overloading on const and volatile- why does it work by reference?

I have the code:

#include "stdafx.h"
#include <iostream>

using namespace std;


void func(const int& a)
{
    std::cout << "func(const)" << std::endl;
}

void func(volatile int& a)
{
    std::cout << "func(volatile)" << std::endl;
}

void func(const volatile int& a)
{
    std::cout << "func(const volatile)" << std::endl;
}

int main()
{
    const int a = 0;
    const volatile int b = 0;
    volatile int c = 0;
    func(a);
    func(b);
    func(c);
    system("pause");
    return 0;
}

The above code shows overloading based on whether the parameters are const/volatile. However, if I were to change the parameters from int& to int, the code no longer compiles and I cannot overload based upon const/volatile parameter types. I dont get why we can overload based on const and volatile if the int is passed by reference, but not if its passed by value?

EDIT I should emphasise I understand what a reference does- I do not understand why a reference alias is allowed to overload on const but a normal int is not.

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The issue is that the top level const and/or volatile are ignored in overload resolution. So

void foo(const int);

is exactly the same as

void foo(int);

and similarly for volatile. This is a language rule, and it makes sense since the arguments are passed by value. On the other hand, reference to const/volatile or pointer to const/volatile have a different meaning: you are not allowed to call non-const/volatile methods on what they refer to or point to. Here, the const volatile are not top level.

void foo(int& i);       // can modify what i refers to, and this has effects outside of foo.
void foo(const int& i); // cannot modify what i refers to

The two above declarations have very different semantics, so the language makes them distinct concerning overload resolution.


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