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Some initial language towards embedded types and methods for all types.
More to come. R=r DELTA=74 (47 added, 8 deleted, 19 changed) OCL=16156 CL=16159
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@ -52,11 +52,14 @@ Open issues according to gri:
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[ ] type switch or some form of type test needed
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[ ] what is the meaning of typeof()
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[ ] at the moment: type T S; strips any methods of S. It probably shouldn't.
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[ ] talk about underflow/overflow of 2's complement numbers (defined vs not defined).
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[ ] 6g allows: interface { f F } where F is a function type. fine, but then we should
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also allow: func f F {}, where F is a function type.
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Decisions in need of integration into the doc:
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[ ] pair assignment is required to get map, and receive ok.
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[ ] change wording on array composite literals: the types are always fixed arrays
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for array composites
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Closed issues:
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[x] remove "any"
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@ -64,7 +67,6 @@ Closed issues:
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[x] should binary <- be at lowest precedence level? when is a send/receive non-blocking? (NO - 9/19/08)
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[x] func literal like a composite type - should probably require the '&' to get address (NO)
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[x] & needed to get a function pointer from a function? (NO - there is the "func" keyword - 9/19/08)
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-->
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Contents
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@ -77,7 +79,7 @@ Contents
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Source code representation
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Characters
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Letters and digits
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Vocabulary
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Identifiers
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Numeric literals
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@ -92,11 +94,13 @@ Contents
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Export declarations
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Types
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Type interfaces
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Basic types
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Arithmetic types
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Booleans
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Strings
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Array types
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Struct types
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Pointer types
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@ -119,14 +123,14 @@ Contents
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Slices
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Type guards
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Calls
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Operators
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Arithmetic operators
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Comparison operators
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Logical operators
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Address operators
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Communication operators
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Constant expressions
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Statements
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@ -147,11 +151,11 @@ Contents
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Goto statements
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Function declarations
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Methods (type-bound functions)
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Predeclared functions
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Length and capacity
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Conversions
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Allocation
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Method declarations
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Predeclared functions
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Length and capacity
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Conversions
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Allocation
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Packages
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@ -754,6 +758,11 @@ with the static type of the variable.
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TypeName = QualifiedIdent.
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Type interfaces
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----
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TODO fill in this section
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Basic types
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----
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@ -983,9 +992,6 @@ to arrays and arrays.
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Struct types
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----
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TODO: The language below needs to be adjusted for inlined types. The syntax
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is probably all right.
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A struct is a composite type consisting of a fixed number of elements,
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called fields, with possibly different types. The struct type declaration
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specifies the name and type for each field. The scope of each field identifier
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@ -995,10 +1001,6 @@ it is also visible within field selectors (§Primary Expressions).
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StructType = "struct" "{" [ FieldList [ ";" ] ] "}" .
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FieldList = FieldDecl { ";" FieldDecl } .
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FieldDecl = [ IdentifierList ] Type .
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Type equality: Two struct types are equal only if both have the same number
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of fields in the same order and and the field types are equal
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(note that the field names do not have to match).
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// An empty struct.
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struct {}
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@ -1010,7 +1012,31 @@ of fields in the same order and and the field types are equal
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a *[]int;
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f *();
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}
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A struct may contain ``embedded types''. An embedded type is declared with
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a type name but no explicit field name. Instead, the type name acts as the
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field name.
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// A struct with a single embedded type T.
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struct {
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x, y int;
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T;
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}
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As with all scopes, each field name must be unique within a single struct
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(§Declarations and scope rules); consequently, the name of an embedded type
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must not conflict with the name of any other field or embedded type within
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the scope of the struct.
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Fields and methods (§Method declarations) of an embedded type become directly
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accessible as fields and methods of the struct without the need to specify the
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embedded type (§TODO).
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Type equality: Two struct types are equal only if both have the same number
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of fields in the same order, corresponding fields are either both embedded
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types or they are not, and the corresponding field types are equal.
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Specifically, field names don't have to match.
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Assignment compatibility: Structs are assignment compatible to variables of
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equal type only.
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@ -1156,11 +1182,12 @@ Assignment compatibility: A function pointer can be assigned to a function
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Interface types
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----
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An interface type denotes a set of methods.
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An interface type denotes the set of all types that implement the
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set of methods specified by the interface type.
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InterfaceType = "interface" "{" [ MethodList [ ";" ] ] "}" .
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MethodList = Method { ";" Method } .
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Method = identifier FunctionType .
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MethodList = MethodSpec { ";" MethodSpec } .
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MethodSpec = identifier FunctionType .
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// A basic file interface.
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type File interface {
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@ -2246,15 +2273,25 @@ Implementation restrictions: Functions can only be declared at the global level.
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A function must be declared or forward-declared before it can be invoked.
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Methods
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Method declarations
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----
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A method declaration declares a function with a receiver.
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A method declaration is a function declaration with a receiver. The receiver
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is the first parameter of the method, and the receiver type must be specified
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as a type name, or as a pointer to a type name. The type specified by the
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type name is called ``receiver base type''. The receiver base type must be a
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type declared in the current file. The method is said to be ``bound'' to
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the receiver base type; specifically it is declared within the scope of
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that type (§Type interfaces).
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MethodDecl = "func" Receiver identifier FunctionType ( ";" | Block ) .
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Receiver = "(" identifier Type ")" .
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Receiver = "(" identifier [ "*" ] TypeName ")" .
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All methods bound to a receiver base type must have the same receiver type:
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Either all receiver types are pointers to the base type or they are the base
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type. (TODO: This restriction can be relaxed at the cost of more complicated
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assignment rules to interface types).
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A method is bound to the type of its receiver.
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For instance, given type Point, the declarations
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func (p *Point) Length() float {
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@ -2266,8 +2303,10 @@ For instance, given type Point, the declarations
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p.y = p.y * factor;
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}
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create methods for type *Point. Note that methods may appear anywhere
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after the declaration of the receiver type and may be forward-declared.
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bind the methods "Length" and "Scale" to the receiver base type "Point".
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Method declarations may appear anywhere after the declaration of the receiver
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base type and may be forward-declared.
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Predeclared functions
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