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update tutorial
R=rsc DELTA=30 (5 added, 0 deleted, 25 changed) OCL=33138 CL=33170
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@ -139,12 +139,12 @@ set, it appends a newline, and then writes the result.
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Notice that "main.main" is a niladic function with no return type.
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It's defined that way. Falling off the end of "main.main" means
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''success''; if you want to signal erroneous return, use
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''success''; if you want to signal an erroneous return, call
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sys.Exit(1)
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os.Exit(1)
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The "sys" package is built in and contains some essentials for getting
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started; for instance, "sys.Args" is an array used by the
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The "os" package contains other essentials for getting
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started; for instance, "os.Args" is an array used by the
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"flag" package to access the command-line arguments.
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An Interlude about Types
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@ -261,7 +261,7 @@ or the more idiomatic
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t := new(T);
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Some types - maps, slices, and channels (see below) have reference semantics.
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Some types - maps, slices, and channels (see below) - have reference semantics.
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If you're holding a slice or a map and you modify its contents, other variables
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referencing the same underlying data will see the modification. For these three
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types you want to use the built-in function "make()":
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@ -385,9 +385,9 @@ be negative and "NewFile" will return "nil".
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About those errors: The "os" library includes a general notion of an error
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string, maintaining a unique set of errors throughout the program. It's a
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good idea to use its facility in your own interfaces, as we do here, for
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consistent error handling throughout Go code. In "Open" we use the
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routine "os.ErrnoToError" to translate Unix's integer "errno" value into
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an error string, which will be stored in a unique instance of "*os.Error".
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consistent error handling throughout Go code. In "Open" we use a
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conversion to "os.Errno" to translate Unix's integer "errno" value into
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an error value, which will be stored in a unique instance of type "os.Error".
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Now that we can build "Files", we can write methods for them. To declare
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a method of a type, we define a function to have an explicit receiver
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@ -406,15 +406,18 @@ array, not just for "structs". We'll see an example with arrays later.
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The "String" method is so called because of printing convention we'll
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describe later.
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The methods use the public variable "os.EINVAL" to return the ("*os.Error"
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version of the) Unix error code EINVAL. The "os" library defines a standard
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The methods use the public variable "os.EINVAL" to return the ("os.Error"
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version of the) Unix error code "EINVAL". The "os" library defines a standard
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set of such error values.
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Finally, we can use our new package:
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We can now use our new package:
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--PROG progs/helloworld3.go
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And now we can run the program:
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The import of ''"./file"'' tells the compiler to use our own package rather than
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something from the directory of installed packages.
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Finally we can run the program:
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% helloworld3
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hello, world
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@ -509,7 +512,7 @@ implement a "writer", or any other interface built from its methods that
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fits the current situation. Consider the <i>empty interface</i>
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<pre>
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type interface Empty {}
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type Empty interface {}
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</pre>
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<i>Every</i> type implements the empty interface, which makes it
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@ -562,13 +565,13 @@ We've seen simple uses of the package "fmt", which
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implements "Printf", "Fprintf", and so on.
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Within the "fmt" package, "Printf" is declared with this signature:
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Printf(format string, v ...) (n int, errno *os.Error)
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Printf(format string, v ...) (n int, errno os.Error)
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That "..." represents the variadic argument list that in C would
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be handled using the "stdarg.h" macros, but in Go is passed using
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an empty interface variable ("interface {}") that is then unpacked
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using the reflection library. It's off topic here but the use of
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reflection helps explain some of the nice properties of Go's Printf,
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reflection helps explain some of the nice properties of Go's "Printf",
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due to the ability of "Printf" to discover the type of its arguments
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dynamically.
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@ -661,7 +664,7 @@ not a file. Instead, it is a variable of type "io.Writer", which is an
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interface type defined in the "io" library:
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type Writer interface {
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Write(p []byte) (n int, err *os.Error);
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Write(p []byte) (n int, err os.Error);
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}
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(This interface is another conventional name, this time for "Write"; there are also
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@ -756,7 +759,9 @@ returns the channel to the caller. It is a factory for concurrent
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execution, starting the goroutine and returning its connection.
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The function literal notation (lines 8-12) allows us to construct an
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anonymous function and invoke it on the spot.
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anonymous function and invoke it on the spot. Notice that the local
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variable "ch" is available to the function literal and lives on even
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after "generate" returns.
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The same change can be made to "filter":
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@ -9,37 +9,37 @@ import "fmt"
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// Send the sequence 2, 3, 4, ... to returned channel
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func generate() chan int {
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ch := make(chan int);
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go func(ch chan int){
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go func(){
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for i := 2; ; i++ {
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ch <- i
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}
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}(ch);
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}();
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return ch;
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}
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// Filter out input values divisible by 'prime', send rest to returned channel
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func filter(in chan int, prime int) chan int {
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out := make(chan int);
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go func(in chan int, out chan int, prime int) {
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go func() {
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for {
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if i := <-in; i % prime != 0 {
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out <- i
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}
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}
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}(in, out, prime);
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}();
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return out;
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}
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func sieve() chan int {
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out := make(chan int);
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go func(out chan int) {
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go func() {
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ch := generate();
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for {
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prime := <-ch;
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out <- prime;
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ch = filter(ch, prime);
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}
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}(out);
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}();
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return out;
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}
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