Go Concepts - Operators: Difference between revisions

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Used for:
Used for:
* access of a <tt>struct</tt>'s fields.
* ''field access'': access of a <tt>struct</tt>'s fields.
* ''method call'': invoke a method on the ''instance'' of the type the [[Go_Concepts_-_Functions#Method_Invocation|method]] is associated with, or on the ''pointer'' to an instance of the type the method is associated with.
* ''method call'': invoke a method on the ''instance'' of the type the [[Go_Concepts_-_Functions#Method_Invocation|method]] is associated with, or on the ''pointer'' to an instance of the type the method is associated with.



Revision as of 19:34, 12 April 2016

External

Internal

+

Addition or concatenation. The compiler figures out the semantics based on the operands' types.

Applies to:

-

Subtraction

*

* is the multiplication operator.

As "address operator", * is used with pointers as dereference operator. For more details see reference and dereference operators.

* designates pointer types.

&

& is the reference operator. For more details see reference and dereference operators.

/

Division

%

Remainder

=

The assignment operator.

+=

Addition and assignment.

==

The equality operator. Returns a boolean value.

Can be used to test string equality.

[]

"[]" is the indexing operator. If the index is out of bounds, the runtime generates a run-time panic:

panic: runtime error: index out of range

Applies to:

:=

Short variable declaration operator. It does variable declaration and assignment (initialization). The type of the variable is inferred from the right side expression.

<-

<- is the left arrow operator. It is used to send and receive messages on channels.

.

Used for:

  • field access: access of a struct's fields.
  • method call: invoke a method on the instance of the type the method is associated with, or on the pointer to an instance of the type the method is associated with.
When designating a method call, . can be used both with a value or a pointer. In both situations it has the same semantics. If ptr is a pointer, then ptr.m() is a shorthand for (&ptr).m(),