Go Enumerations: Difference between revisions
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Only the first constant in the series declares its type and an expression involving <code>iota</code>. The simplest is <code>iota</code> itself, but more complex expressions can be used. During the initialization, the compiler advances through the list of constants, and for each advancement, <code>iota</code> is | Only the first constant in the series declares its type and an expression involving <code>iota</code>. The simplest is <code>iota</code> itself, but more complex expressions can be used. During the initialization, the compiler advances through the list of constants, and for each advancement, <code>iota</code> takes the zero-based line number at which <code>iota</code> is declared in the <code>const()</code> sequence. This behavior is explained here. | ||
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Revision as of 19:50, 13 September 2024
External
Internal
Overview
Go does not have formal enums, but the language allows for sets of related, yet distinct int
constants. They represent a property that has several distinct possible int
values, like the days of the weeks or the months of the year.
These auto-incrementing int
constants are declared using a special syntax involving the const
keyword, parentheses and the pre-declared constant iota
:
type DayOfTheWeek int
const (
MON DayOfTheWeek = iota
TUE
WED
THU
FRI
SAT
SUN
)
Only the first constant in the series declares its type and an expression involving iota
. The simplest is iota
itself, but more complex expressions can be used. During the initialization, the compiler advances through the list of constants, and for each advancement, iota
takes the zero-based line number at which iota
is declared in the const()
sequence. This behavior is explained here.
type ByteSize float64
const (
_ = iota // ignore the first value, which is zero, by assigning it to a blank identifier
KB ByteSize = 1 << (10 * iota)
MB
GB
TB
PB
EB
ZB
YB
)
To make the enumeration constants visible outside the package, they need to start with a capital letter.
String Representation
const
enums can take advantage go the possibility of attaching a String()
method to any type, including the enum type, to provide a string representation.
type DayOfTheWeek int
const (
MON DayOfTheWeek = iota
TUE
WED
THU
FRI
SAT
SUN
)
var dayOfTheWeekToString = []string{
"Monday",
"Tuesday",
"Wednesday",
"Thursday",
"Friday",
"Saturday",
"Sunday",
}
func (s DayOfTheWeek) String() string {
return dayOfTheWeekToString[s]
}
func StringToDayOfTheWeek(s string) DayOfTheWeek {
for i, v := range dayOfTheWeekToString {
if s == v {
return DayOfTheWeek(i)
}
}
return DayOfTheWeek(-1)
}