As we mentioned in the previous chapter, Sub procedures are procedures that do not return any value. We have been using the Sub procedure Main in all our examples. We have been writing console applications so far in these tutorials. When these applications start, the control goes to the Main Sub procedure, and it in turn, runs any other statements constituting the body of the program.
The Sub statement is used to declare the name, parameter and the body of a sub procedure. The syntax for the Sub statement is −
[Modifiers] Sub SubName [(ParameterList)] [Statements] End Sub
Where,
Modifiers − specify the access level of the procedure; possible values are - Public, Private, Protected, Friend, Protected Friend and information regarding overloading, overriding, sharing, and shadowing.
SubName − indicates the name of the Sub
ParameterList − specifies the list of the parameters
The following example demonstrates a Sub procedure CalculatePay that takes two parameters hours and wages and displays the total pay of an employee −
Module mysub Sub CalculatePay(ByRef hours As Double, ByRef wage As Decimal) 'local variable declaration Dim pay As Double pay = hours * wage Console.WriteLine("Total Pay: {0:C}", pay) End Sub Sub Main() 'calling the CalculatePay Sub Procedure CalculatePay(25, 10) CalculatePay(40, 20) CalculatePay(30, 27.5) Console.ReadLine() End Sub End Module
When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result −
Total Pay: $250.00 Total Pay: $800.00 Total Pay: $825.00
This is the default mechanism for passing parameters to a method. In this mechanism, when a method is called, a new storage location is created for each value parameter. The values of the actual parameters are copied into them. So, the changes made to the parameter inside the method have no effect on the argument.
In VB.Net, you declare the reference parameters using the ByVal keyword. The following example demonstrates the concept −
Module paramByval Sub swap(ByVal x As Integer, ByVal y As Integer) Dim temp As Integer temp = x ' save the value of x x = y ' put y into x y = temp 'put temp into y End Sub Sub Main() ' local variable definition Dim a As Integer = 100 Dim b As Integer = 200 Console.WriteLine("Before swap, value of a : {0}", a) Console.WriteLine("Before swap, value of b : {0}", b) ' calling a function to swap the values ' swap(a, b) Console.WriteLine("After swap, value of a : {0}", a) Console.WriteLine("After swap, value of b : {0}", b) Console.ReadLine() End Sub End Module
When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result −
Before swap, value of a :100 Before swap, value of b :200 After swap, value of a :100 After swap, value of b :200
It shows that there is no change in the values though they had been changed inside the function.
A reference parameter is a reference to a memory location of a variable. When you pass parameters by reference, unlike value parameters, a new storage location is not created for these parameters. The reference parameters represent the same memory location as the actual parameters that are supplied to the method.
In VB.Net, you declare the reference parameters using the ByRef keyword. The following example demonstrates this −
Module paramByref Sub swap(ByRef x As Integer, ByRef y As Integer) Dim temp As Integer temp = x ' save the value of x x = y ' put y into x y = temp 'put temp into y End Sub Sub Main() ' local variable definition Dim a As Integer = 100 Dim b As Integer = 200 Console.WriteLine("Before swap, value of a : {0}", a) Console.WriteLine("Before swap, value of b : {0}", b) ' calling a function to swap the values ' swap(a, b) Console.WriteLine("After swap, value of a : {0}", a) Console.WriteLine("After swap, value of b : {0}", b) Console.ReadLine() End Sub End Module
When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result −
Before swap, value of a : 100 Before swap, value of b : 200 After swap, value of a : 200 After swap, value of b : 100