Yes, you can, if both variables are of type Variant.
Here's why: The Variant type is itself a wrapper. The actual bit content of a Variant is 16 bytes. The first byte indicates the actual data type currently stored. The value corresponds exactly the VbVarType enum. I.e if the Variant is currently holding a Long value, the first byte will be 0x03
, the value of vbLong
. The second byte contains some bit flags. For exampe, if the variant contains an array, the bit at 0x20
in this byte will be set.
The use of the remaining 14 bytes depends on the data type being stored. For any array type, it contains the address of the array.
That means if you directly overwrite the value of one variant using RtlMoveMemory
you have in effect overwritten the reference to an array. This does in fact work!
There's one caveat: When an array variable goes out of scope, the VB runtime will reclaim the memory that the actual array elements contained. When you have manually duplicated an array reference via the Variant CopyMemory technique I've just described, the result is that the runtime will try to reclaim that same memory twice when both variants go out of scope, and the program will crash. To avoid this, you need to manually "erase" all but one of the references by overwriting the variant again, such as with 0s, before the variables go out of scope.
Example 1: This works, but will crash once both variables go out of scope (when the sub exits)
Private Declare PtrSafe Sub CopyMemory Lib "kernel32" _
Alias "RtlMoveMemory" (Destination As Any, Source As Any, ByVal Length As Long)
Sub CopyArrayRef_Bad()
Dim v1 As Variant, v2 As Variant
v1 = Array(1, 2, 3)
CopyMemory v2, v1, 16
' Proof:
v2(1) = "Hello"
Debug.Print Join(v1, ", ")
' ... and now the program will crash
End Sub
Example 2: With careful cleanup, you can get away with it!
Private Declare PtrSafe Sub CopyMemory Lib "kernel32" _
Alias "RtlMoveMemory" (Destination As Any, Source As Any, ByVal Length As Long)
Private Declare PtrSafe Sub FillMemory Lib "kernel32" _
Alias "RtlFillMemory" (Destination As Any, ByVal Length As Long, ByVal Fill As Byte)
Sub CopyArrayRef_Good()
Dim v1 As Variant, v2 As Variant
v1 = Array(1, 2, 3)
CopyMemory v2, v1, 16
' Proof:
v2(1) = "Hello"
Debug.Print Join(v1, ", ")
' Clean up:
FillMemory v2, 16, 0
' All good!
End Sub