Go Constants: Difference between revisions
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A constant is a typed expression whose value is created at compile time, and cannot be changed once declared. The expressions that define constants must be [[Go_Language#Constant_Expression|constant expressions]], evaluatable by the compiler. The compiler detects modification attempts and throws a compilation error. The type is inferred from the right-hand side of the assignment. | A constant is a typed expression whose value is created at compile time, and cannot be changed once declared. The expressions that define constants must be [[Go_Language#Constant_Expression|constant expressions]], evaluatable by the compiler. The compiler detects modification attempts and throws a compilation error. The type is inferred from the right-hand side of the assignment. | ||
Constants can only be numbers, characters (runes), strings or booleans. | Constants can be declared in the [[Go_Language#Package_Block|package block]] and in functions. Constants can only be numbers, characters (runes), strings or booleans. | ||
Multiple constants can be assigned at the same time using enclosing parentheses. | Multiple constants can be assigned at the same time using enclosing parentheses. |
Revision as of 22:25, 12 September 2024
External
Internal
Overview
A constant is a typed expression whose value is created at compile time, and cannot be changed once declared. The expressions that define constants must be constant expressions, evaluatable by the compiler. The compiler detects modification attempts and throws a compilation error. The type is inferred from the right-hand side of the assignment.
Constants can be declared in the package block and in functions. Constants can only be numbers, characters (runes), strings or booleans.
Multiple constants can be assigned at the same time using enclosing parentheses.
const <constant_identifier> [constant_type] = <initial_value_literal>
const a = 1
const (
b = 1.1
c = "something"
)
Naming
The names of constants in Go follow the general naming conventions for identifiers. While other languages name their constants using all upper caps, Go does not do that. In Go, an unexported constant is maxLength
, not MaxLength
or MAX_LENGTH
.
Enumerations
Go does not have formal enums, but the language allows for sets of related, yet distinct constants.