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- added missing language to operator section in spec
R=r,ken DELTA=100 (71 added, 9 deleted, 20 changed) OCL=14827 CL=14832
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doc/go_spec.txt
112
doc/go_spec.txt
@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ The Go Programming Language Specification (DRAFT)
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Robert Griesemer, Rob Pike, Ken Thompson
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----
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(September 3, 2008)
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(September 4, 2008)
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This document is a semi-formal specification of the Go systems
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@ -1156,8 +1156,8 @@ key-value pairs separated by a colon:
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m := map[string]int("good": 0, "bad": 1, "indifferent": 7)
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TODO: helper syntax for nested arrays etc? (avoids repeating types but
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complicates the spec needlessly.)
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TODO: Consider adding helper syntax for nested composites
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(avoids repeating types but complicates the spec needlessly.)
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TODO(gri): These are not conversions and we could use {} instead of () in
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@ -1288,6 +1288,8 @@ There is no distinct method type and there are no method literals.
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Operators
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----
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Operators combine operands into expressions.
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Expression = UnaryExpr { binary_op Expression } .
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UnaryExpr = unary_op UnaryExpr | PrimaryExpr .
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@ -1300,17 +1302,28 @@ Operators
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unary_op = "+" | "-" | "!" | "^" | "*" | "&" | "<-" .
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With the exception of shifts (see Arithmetic operators),
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the operand types in binary operations must be the same.
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For instance, signed and unsigned integer values cannot be
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mixed in an expression, and there is no implicit conversion
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from integer to floating point types.
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Precedence levels of binary operators, in increasing precedence:
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Unary operators have the highest precedence.
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There are six precedence levels for binary operators:
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multiplication operators bind strongest, followed by addition
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operators, comparison operators, communication operators, "&&" (logical and),
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and finally "||" (logical or) with the lowest precedence:
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Precedence Operator
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1 ||
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2 &&
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3 <- -<
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4 == != < <= > >=
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5 + - | ^
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6 * / % << >> &
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5 + - | ^
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4 == != < <= > >=
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3 <- -<
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2 &&
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1 ||
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Operators of the same precedence associate from left to right.
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For instance, "x / y / z" stands for "(x / y) / z".
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Examples
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@ -1325,6 +1338,33 @@ Examples
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Arithmetic operators
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----
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Arithmetic operators apply to numeric types and yield a result of the same
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type as the first operand. The four standard arithmetic operators ("+", "-",
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"*", "/") apply to both integer and floating point types, while "+" also applies
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to strings and arrays; all other arithmetic operators apply to integer types only.
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+ sum integers, floats, strings, arrays
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- difference integers, floats
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* product integers, floats
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/ quotient integers, floats
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% remainder integers
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& bitwise and integers
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| bitwise or integers
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^ bitwise xor integers
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<< left shift integer << unsigned integer
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>> right shift integer >> unsigned integer
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Strings and arrays can be concatenated using the "+" operator
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(or via the "+=" assignment):
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s := "hi" + string(c)
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a += []int(5, 6, 7)
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String and array addition creates a new array or string by copying the
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elements.
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For integer values, / and % satisfy the following relationship:
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(a / b) * b + a % b == a
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@ -1333,11 +1373,21 @@ and
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(a / b) is "truncated towards zero".
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Examples:
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There are no implicit type conversions: Except for the shift operators
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"<<" and ">>", both operands of a binary operator must have the same type.
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In particular, unsigned and signed integer values cannot be mixed in an
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expression without explicit conversion.
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x y x / y x % y
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5 3 1 2
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-5 3 -1 -2
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5 -3 -1 2
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-5 -3 1 -2
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Note that if the dividend is positive and the divisor is a constant power of 2,
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the division may be replaced by a left shift, and computing the remainder may
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be replaced by a bitwise "and" operation:
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x x / 4 x % 4 x >> 2 x & 3
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11 2 3 2 3
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-11 -2 -3 -3 1
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The shift operators shift the left operand by the shift count specified by the
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right operand. They implement arithmetic shifts if the left operand is a signed
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@ -1345,34 +1395,46 @@ integer, and logical shifts if it is an unsigned integer. The shift count must
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be an unsigned integer. There is no upper limit on the shift count. It is
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as if the left operand is shifted "n" times by 1 for a shift count of "n".
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Unary "^" corresponds to C "~" (bitwise complement). There is no "~" operator
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in Go.
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The unary operators "+", "-", and "^" are defined as follows:
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Strings and arrays can also be concatenated using the ``+'' (or ``+='')
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operator.
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a += []int(5, 6, 7)
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s := "hi" + string(c)
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Like slices, addition creates a new array or string by copying the
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elements.
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+x is 0 + x
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-x negation is 0 - x
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^x bitwise complement is -1 ^ x
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Comparison operators
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----
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TODO: write this section
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Comparison operators yield a boolean result. All comparison operators apply
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to strings and numeric types. The operators "==" and "!=" also apply to
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boolean values and to pointer types (including the value "nil").
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== equal
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!= not equal
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< less
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<= less or equal
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> greater
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>= greater or equal
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TODO: Can we/should we be able to compare interfaces?
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Logical operators
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----
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TODO: write this section
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Logical operators apply to boolean operands and yield a boolean result.
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The right operand is evaluated conditionally.
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&& conditional and p && q is "if p then q else false"
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|| conditional or p || q is "if p then true else q"
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! not !p is "not p"
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Address operators
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----
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TODO: Need to talk about unary "*", clean up section below.
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Given a function f, declared as
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func f(a int) int;
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