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add an entry in the lang faq about reference types.
remove a mention of sawzall in the tutorial. R=rsc DELTA=36 (14 added, 4 deleted, 18 changed) OCL=35717 CL=35719
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@ -354,6 +354,20 @@ will not invalidate any existing programs—but without a clear idea of what
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equality of structs and arrays should mean, it was simpler to leave it out for now.
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</p>
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<h3 id="references">
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Why are maps, slices, and channels references while arrays are values?</h3>
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<p>
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There's a lot of history on that topic. Early on, maps and channels
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were syntactically pointers and it was impossible to declare or use a
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non-pointer instance. Also, we struggled with how arrays should work.
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Eventually we decided that the strict separation of pointers and
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values made the language harder to use. Introducing reference types,
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including slices to handle the reference form of arrays, resolved
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these issues. Reference types add some regrettable complexity to the
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language but they have a large effect on usability: Go became a more
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productive, comfortable language when they were introduced.
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</p>
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<h2 id="concurrency">Concurrency</h2>
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<h3 id="csp">
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@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ or we could go even shorter and write the idiom
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</pre>
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<p>
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The <code>:=</code> operator is used a lot in Go to represent an initializing declaration.
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(For those who know Sawzall, its <code>:=</code> construct is the same, but notice
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(For those who know Limbo, its <code>:=</code> construct is the same, but notice
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that Go has no colon after the name in a full <code>var</code> declaration.
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Also, for simplicity of parsing, <code>:=</code> only works inside functions, not at
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the top level.)
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@ -878,9 +878,9 @@ argument. It's easier in many cases in Go. Instead of <code>%llud</code> you
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can just say <code>%d</code>; <code>Printf</code> knows the size and signedness of the
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integer and can do the right thing for you. The snippet
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<p>
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<pre> <!-- progs/print.go NR==6 NR==7 -->
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06
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07 import "fmt"
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<pre> <!-- progs/print.go NR==10 NR==11 -->
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10 var u64 uint64 = 1<<64-1;
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11 fmt.Printf("%d %d\n", u64, int64(u64));
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</pre>
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<p>
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prints
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@ -892,11 +892,11 @@ prints
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In fact, if you're lazy the format <code>%v</code> will print, in a simple
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appropriate style, any value, even an array or structure. The output of
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<p>
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<pre> <!-- progs/print.go NR==10 NR==13 -->
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10 var u64 uint64 = 1<<64-1;
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11 fmt.Printf("%d %d\n", u64, int64(u64));
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<p>
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13 // harder stuff
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<pre> <!-- progs/print.go NR==14 NR==17 -->
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14 type T struct { a int; b string };
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15 t := T{77, "Sunset Strip"};
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16 a := []int{1, 2, 3, 4};
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17 fmt.Printf("%v %v %v\n", u64, t, a);
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</pre>
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<p>
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is
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@ -912,9 +912,9 @@ of <code>%v</code> while <code>Println</code> automatically inserts spaces betwe
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and adds a newline. The output of each of these two lines is identical
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to that of the <code>Printf</code> call above.
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<p>
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<pre> <!-- progs/print.go NR==14 NR==15 -->
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14 type T struct { a int; b string };
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15 t := T{77, "Sunset Strip"};
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<pre> <!-- progs/print.go NR==18 NR==19 -->
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18 fmt.Print(u64, " ", t, " ", a, "\n");
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19 fmt.Println(u64, t, a);
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</pre>
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<p>
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If you have your own type you'd like <code>Printf</code> or <code>Print</code> to format,
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@ -923,11 +923,7 @@ routines will examine the value to inquire whether it implements
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the method and if so, use it rather than some other formatting.
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Here's a simple example.
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<p>
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<pre> <!-- progs/print_string.go NR==5 END -->
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05 package main
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<p>
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07 import "fmt"
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<p>
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<pre> <!-- progs/print_string.go NR==9 END -->
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09 type testType struct { a int; b string }
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<p>
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11 func (t *testType) String() string {
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@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ or we could go even shorter and write the idiom
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s := "";
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The ":=" operator is used a lot in Go to represent an initializing declaration.
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(For those who know Sawzall, its ":=" construct is the same, but notice
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(For those who know Limbo, its ":=" construct is the same, but notice
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that Go has no colon after the name in a full "var" declaration.
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Also, for simplicity of parsing, ":=" only works inside functions, not at
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the top level.)
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@ -567,7 +567,7 @@ argument. It's easier in many cases in Go. Instead of "%llud" you
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can just say "%d"; "Printf" knows the size and signedness of the
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integer and can do the right thing for you. The snippet
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--PROG progs/print.go 'NR==6' 'NR==7'
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--PROG progs/print.go 'NR==10' 'NR==11'
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prints
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@ -576,7 +576,7 @@ prints
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In fact, if you're lazy the format "%v" will print, in a simple
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appropriate style, any value, even an array or structure. The output of
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--PROG progs/print.go 'NR==10' 'NR==13'
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--PROG progs/print.go 'NR==14' 'NR==17'
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is
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@ -589,7 +589,7 @@ of "%v" while "Println" automatically inserts spaces between arguments
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and adds a newline. The output of each of these two lines is identical
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to that of the "Printf" call above.
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--PROG progs/print.go 'NR==14' 'NR==15'
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--PROG progs/print.go 'NR==18' 'NR==19'
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If you have your own type you'd like "Printf" or "Print" to format,
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just give it a "String()" method that returns a string. The print
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@ -597,7 +597,7 @@ routines will examine the value to inquire whether it implements
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the method and if so, use it rather than some other formatting.
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Here's a simple example.
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--PROG progs/print_string.go 'NR==5' END
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--PROG progs/print_string.go 'NR==9' END
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Since "*T" has a "String()" method, the
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default formatter for that type will use it and produce the output
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