github.com/peggyl/go@v0.0.0-20151008231540-ae315999c2d5/doc/go_spec.html (about)

     1  <!--{
     2  	"Title": "The Go Programming Language Specification",
     3  	"Subtitle": "Version of September 24, 2015",
     4  	"Path": "/ref/spec"
     5  }-->
     6  
     7  <h2 id="Introduction">Introduction</h2>
     8  
     9  <p>
    10  This is a reference manual for the Go programming language. For
    11  more information and other documents, see <a href="/">golang.org</a>.
    12  </p>
    13  
    14  <p>
    15  Go is a general-purpose language designed with systems programming
    16  in mind. It is strongly typed and garbage-collected and has explicit
    17  support for concurrent programming.  Programs are constructed from
    18  <i>packages</i>, whose properties allow efficient management of
    19  dependencies. The existing implementations use a traditional
    20  compile/link model to generate executable binaries.
    21  </p>
    22  
    23  <p>
    24  The grammar is compact and regular, allowing for easy analysis by
    25  automatic tools such as integrated development environments.
    26  </p>
    27  
    28  <h2 id="Notation">Notation</h2>
    29  <p>
    30  The syntax is specified using Extended Backus-Naur Form (EBNF):
    31  </p>
    32  
    33  <pre class="grammar">
    34  Production  = production_name "=" [ Expression ] "." .
    35  Expression  = Alternative { "|" Alternative } .
    36  Alternative = Term { Term } .
    37  Term        = production_name | token [ "…" token ] | Group | Option | Repetition .
    38  Group       = "(" Expression ")" .
    39  Option      = "[" Expression "]" .
    40  Repetition  = "{" Expression "}" .
    41  </pre>
    42  
    43  <p>
    44  Productions are expressions constructed from terms and the following
    45  operators, in increasing precedence:
    46  </p>
    47  <pre class="grammar">
    48  |   alternation
    49  ()  grouping
    50  []  option (0 or 1 times)
    51  {}  repetition (0 to n times)
    52  </pre>
    53  
    54  <p>
    55  Lower-case production names are used to identify lexical tokens.
    56  Non-terminals are in CamelCase. Lexical tokens are enclosed in
    57  double quotes <code>""</code> or back quotes <code>``</code>.
    58  </p>
    59  
    60  <p>
    61  The form <code>a … b</code> represents the set of characters from
    62  <code>a</code> through <code>b</code> as alternatives. The horizontal
    63  ellipsis <code>…</code> is also used elsewhere in the spec to informally denote various
    64  enumerations or code snippets that are not further specified. The character <code>…</code>
    65  (as opposed to the three characters <code>...</code>) is not a token of the Go
    66  language.
    67  </p>
    68  
    69  <h2 id="Source_code_representation">Source code representation</h2>
    70  
    71  <p>
    72  Source code is Unicode text encoded in
    73  <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8">UTF-8</a>. The text is not
    74  canonicalized, so a single accented code point is distinct from the
    75  same character constructed from combining an accent and a letter;
    76  those are treated as two code points.  For simplicity, this document
    77  will use the unqualified term <i>character</i> to refer to a Unicode code point
    78  in the source text.
    79  </p>
    80  <p>
    81  Each code point is distinct; for instance, upper and lower case letters
    82  are different characters.
    83  </p>
    84  <p>
    85  Implementation restriction: For compatibility with other tools, a
    86  compiler may disallow the NUL character (U+0000) in the source text.
    87  </p>
    88  <p>
    89  Implementation restriction: For compatibility with other tools, a
    90  compiler may ignore a UTF-8-encoded byte order mark
    91  (U+FEFF) if it is the first Unicode code point in the source text.
    92  A byte order mark may be disallowed anywhere else in the source.
    93  </p>
    94  
    95  <h3 id="Characters">Characters</h3>
    96  
    97  <p>
    98  The following terms are used to denote specific Unicode character classes:
    99  </p>
   100  <pre class="ebnf">
   101  newline        = /* the Unicode code point U+000A */ .
   102  unicode_char   = /* an arbitrary Unicode code point except newline */ .
   103  unicode_letter = /* a Unicode code point classified as "Letter" */ .
   104  unicode_digit  = /* a Unicode code point classified as "Decimal Digit" */ .
   105  </pre>
   106  
   107  <p>
   108  In <a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.3.0/">The Unicode Standard 6.3</a>,
   109  Section 4.5 "General Category"
   110  defines a set of character categories.  Go treats
   111  those characters in category Lu, Ll, Lt, Lm, or Lo as Unicode letters,
   112  and those in category Nd as Unicode digits.
   113  </p>
   114  
   115  <h3 id="Letters_and_digits">Letters and digits</h3>
   116  
   117  <p>
   118  The underscore character <code>_</code> (U+005F) is considered a letter.
   119  </p>
   120  <pre class="ebnf">
   121  letter        = unicode_letter | "_" .
   122  decimal_digit = "0" … "9" .
   123  octal_digit   = "0" … "7" .
   124  hex_digit     = "0" … "9" | "A" … "F" | "a" … "f" .
   125  </pre>
   126  
   127  <h2 id="Lexical_elements">Lexical elements</h2>
   128  
   129  <h3 id="Comments">Comments</h3>
   130  
   131  <p>
   132  Comments serve as program documentation. There are two forms:
   133  </p>
   134  
   135  <ol>
   136  <li>
   137  <i>Line comments</i> start with the character sequence <code>//</code>
   138  and stop at the end of the line.
   139  </li>
   140  <li>
   141  <i>General comments</i> start with the character sequence <code>/*</code>
   142  and stop with the first subsequent character sequence <code>*/</code>.
   143  </li>
   144  </ol>
   145  
   146  <p>
   147  A comment cannot start inside a <a href="#Rune_literals">rune</a> or
   148  <a href="#String_literals">string literal</a>, or inside a comment.
   149  A general comment containing no newlines acts like a space.
   150  Any other comment acts like a newline.
   151  </p>
   152  
   153  <h3 id="Tokens">Tokens</h3>
   154  
   155  <p>
   156  Tokens form the vocabulary of the Go language.
   157  There are four classes: <i>identifiers</i>, <i>keywords</i>, <i>operators
   158  and delimiters</i>, and <i>literals</i>.  <i>White space</i>, formed from
   159  spaces (U+0020), horizontal tabs (U+0009),
   160  carriage returns (U+000D), and newlines (U+000A),
   161  is ignored except as it separates tokens
   162  that would otherwise combine into a single token. Also, a newline or end of file
   163  may trigger the insertion of a <a href="#Semicolons">semicolon</a>.
   164  While breaking the input into tokens,
   165  the next token is the longest sequence of characters that form a
   166  valid token.
   167  </p>
   168  
   169  <h3 id="Semicolons">Semicolons</h3>
   170  
   171  <p>
   172  The formal grammar uses semicolons <code>";"</code> as terminators in
   173  a number of productions. Go programs may omit most of these semicolons
   174  using the following two rules:
   175  </p>
   176  
   177  <ol>
   178  <li>
   179  When the input is broken into tokens, a semicolon is automatically inserted
   180  into the token stream immediately after a line's final token if that token is
   181  <ul>
   182  	<li>an
   183  	    <a href="#Identifiers">identifier</a>
   184  	</li>
   185  
   186  	<li>an
   187  	    <a href="#Integer_literals">integer</a>,
   188  	    <a href="#Floating-point_literals">floating-point</a>,
   189  	    <a href="#Imaginary_literals">imaginary</a>,
   190  	    <a href="#Rune_literals">rune</a>, or
   191  	    <a href="#String_literals">string</a> literal
   192  	</li>
   193  
   194  	<li>one of the <a href="#Keywords">keywords</a>
   195  	    <code>break</code>,
   196  	    <code>continue</code>,
   197  	    <code>fallthrough</code>, or
   198  	    <code>return</code>
   199  	</li>
   200  
   201  	<li>one of the <a href="#Operators_and_Delimiters">operators and delimiters</a>
   202  	    <code>++</code>,
   203  	    <code>--</code>,
   204  	    <code>)</code>,
   205  	    <code>]</code>, or
   206  	    <code>}</code>
   207  	</li>
   208  </ul>
   209  </li>
   210  
   211  <li>
   212  To allow complex statements to occupy a single line, a semicolon
   213  may be omitted before a closing <code>")"</code> or <code>"}"</code>.
   214  </li>
   215  </ol>
   216  
   217  <p>
   218  To reflect idiomatic use, code examples in this document elide semicolons
   219  using these rules.
   220  </p>
   221  
   222  
   223  <h3 id="Identifiers">Identifiers</h3>
   224  
   225  <p>
   226  Identifiers name program entities such as variables and types.
   227  An identifier is a sequence of one or more letters and digits.
   228  The first character in an identifier must be a letter.
   229  </p>
   230  <pre class="ebnf">
   231  identifier = letter { letter | unicode_digit } .
   232  </pre>
   233  <pre>
   234  a
   235  _x9
   236  ThisVariableIsExported
   237  αβ
   238  </pre>
   239  
   240  <p>
   241  Some identifiers are <a href="#Predeclared_identifiers">predeclared</a>.
   242  </p>
   243  
   244  
   245  <h3 id="Keywords">Keywords</h3>
   246  
   247  <p>
   248  The following keywords are reserved and may not be used as identifiers.
   249  </p>
   250  <pre class="grammar">
   251  break        default      func         interface    select
   252  case         defer        go           map          struct
   253  chan         else         goto         package      switch
   254  const        fallthrough  if           range        type
   255  continue     for          import       return       var
   256  </pre>
   257  
   258  <h3 id="Operators_and_Delimiters">Operators and Delimiters</h3>
   259  
   260  <p>
   261  The following character sequences represent <a href="#Operators">operators</a>, delimiters, and other special tokens:
   262  </p>
   263  <pre class="grammar">
   264  +    &amp;     +=    &amp;=     &amp;&amp;    ==    !=    (    )
   265  -    |     -=    |=     ||    &lt;     &lt;=    [    ]
   266  *    ^     *=    ^=     &lt;-    &gt;     &gt;=    {    }
   267  /    &lt;&lt;    /=    &lt;&lt;=    ++    =     :=    ,    ;
   268  %    &gt;&gt;    %=    &gt;&gt;=    --    !     ...   .    :
   269       &amp;^          &amp;^=
   270  </pre>
   271  
   272  <h3 id="Integer_literals">Integer literals</h3>
   273  
   274  <p>
   275  An integer literal is a sequence of digits representing an
   276  <a href="#Constants">integer constant</a>.
   277  An optional prefix sets a non-decimal base: <code>0</code> for octal, <code>0x</code> or
   278  <code>0X</code> for hexadecimal.  In hexadecimal literals, letters
   279  <code>a-f</code> and <code>A-F</code> represent values 10 through 15.
   280  </p>
   281  <pre class="ebnf">
   282  int_lit     = decimal_lit | octal_lit | hex_lit .
   283  decimal_lit = ( "1" … "9" ) { decimal_digit } .
   284  octal_lit   = "0" { octal_digit } .
   285  hex_lit     = "0" ( "x" | "X" ) hex_digit { hex_digit } .
   286  </pre>
   287  
   288  <pre>
   289  42
   290  0600
   291  0xBadFace
   292  170141183460469231731687303715884105727
   293  </pre>
   294  
   295  <h3 id="Floating-point_literals">Floating-point literals</h3>
   296  <p>
   297  A floating-point literal is a decimal representation of a
   298  <a href="#Constants">floating-point constant</a>.
   299  It has an integer part, a decimal point, a fractional part,
   300  and an exponent part.  The integer and fractional part comprise
   301  decimal digits; the exponent part is an <code>e</code> or <code>E</code>
   302  followed by an optionally signed decimal exponent.  One of the
   303  integer part or the fractional part may be elided; one of the decimal
   304  point or the exponent may be elided.
   305  </p>
   306  <pre class="ebnf">
   307  float_lit = decimals "." [ decimals ] [ exponent ] |
   308              decimals exponent |
   309              "." decimals [ exponent ] .
   310  decimals  = decimal_digit { decimal_digit } .
   311  exponent  = ( "e" | "E" ) [ "+" | "-" ] decimals .
   312  </pre>
   313  
   314  <pre>
   315  0.
   316  72.40
   317  072.40  // == 72.40
   318  2.71828
   319  1.e+0
   320  6.67428e-11
   321  1E6
   322  .25
   323  .12345E+5
   324  </pre>
   325  
   326  <h3 id="Imaginary_literals">Imaginary literals</h3>
   327  <p>
   328  An imaginary literal is a decimal representation of the imaginary part of a
   329  <a href="#Constants">complex constant</a>.
   330  It consists of a
   331  <a href="#Floating-point_literals">floating-point literal</a>
   332  or decimal integer followed
   333  by the lower-case letter <code>i</code>.
   334  </p>
   335  <pre class="ebnf">
   336  imaginary_lit = (decimals | float_lit) "i" .
   337  </pre>
   338  
   339  <pre>
   340  0i
   341  011i  // == 11i
   342  0.i
   343  2.71828i
   344  1.e+0i
   345  6.67428e-11i
   346  1E6i
   347  .25i
   348  .12345E+5i
   349  </pre>
   350  
   351  
   352  <h3 id="Rune_literals">Rune literals</h3>
   353  
   354  <p>
   355  A rune literal represents a <a href="#Constants">rune constant</a>,
   356  an integer value identifying a Unicode code point.
   357  A rune literal is expressed as one or more characters enclosed in single quotes,
   358  as in <code>'x'</code> or <code>'\n'</code>.
   359  Within the quotes, any character may appear except newline and unescaped single
   360  quote. A single quoted character represents the Unicode value
   361  of the character itself,
   362  while multi-character sequences beginning with a backslash encode
   363  values in various formats.
   364  </p>
   365  <p>
   366  The simplest form represents the single character within the quotes;
   367  since Go source text is Unicode characters encoded in UTF-8, multiple
   368  UTF-8-encoded bytes may represent a single integer value.  For
   369  instance, the literal <code>'a'</code> holds a single byte representing
   370  a literal <code>a</code>, Unicode U+0061, value <code>0x61</code>, while
   371  <code>'ä'</code> holds two bytes (<code>0xc3</code> <code>0xa4</code>) representing
   372  a literal <code>a</code>-dieresis, U+00E4, value <code>0xe4</code>.
   373  </p>
   374  <p>
   375  Several backslash escapes allow arbitrary values to be encoded as
   376  ASCII text.  There are four ways to represent the integer value
   377  as a numeric constant: <code>\x</code> followed by exactly two hexadecimal
   378  digits; <code>\u</code> followed by exactly four hexadecimal digits;
   379  <code>\U</code> followed by exactly eight hexadecimal digits, and a
   380  plain backslash <code>\</code> followed by exactly three octal digits.
   381  In each case the value of the literal is the value represented by
   382  the digits in the corresponding base.
   383  </p>
   384  <p>
   385  Although these representations all result in an integer, they have
   386  different valid ranges.  Octal escapes must represent a value between
   387  0 and 255 inclusive.  Hexadecimal escapes satisfy this condition
   388  by construction. The escapes <code>\u</code> and <code>\U</code>
   389  represent Unicode code points so within them some values are illegal,
   390  in particular those above <code>0x10FFFF</code> and surrogate halves.
   391  </p>
   392  <p>
   393  After a backslash, certain single-character escapes represent special values:
   394  </p>
   395  <pre class="grammar">
   396  \a   U+0007 alert or bell
   397  \b   U+0008 backspace
   398  \f   U+000C form feed
   399  \n   U+000A line feed or newline
   400  \r   U+000D carriage return
   401  \t   U+0009 horizontal tab
   402  \v   U+000b vertical tab
   403  \\   U+005c backslash
   404  \'   U+0027 single quote  (valid escape only within rune literals)
   405  \"   U+0022 double quote  (valid escape only within string literals)
   406  </pre>
   407  <p>
   408  All other sequences starting with a backslash are illegal inside rune literals.
   409  </p>
   410  <pre class="ebnf">
   411  rune_lit         = "'" ( unicode_value | byte_value ) "'" .
   412  unicode_value    = unicode_char | little_u_value | big_u_value | escaped_char .
   413  byte_value       = octal_byte_value | hex_byte_value .
   414  octal_byte_value = `\` octal_digit octal_digit octal_digit .
   415  hex_byte_value   = `\` "x" hex_digit hex_digit .
   416  little_u_value   = `\` "u" hex_digit hex_digit hex_digit hex_digit .
   417  big_u_value      = `\` "U" hex_digit hex_digit hex_digit hex_digit
   418                             hex_digit hex_digit hex_digit hex_digit .
   419  escaped_char     = `\` ( "a" | "b" | "f" | "n" | "r" | "t" | "v" | `\` | "'" | `"` ) .
   420  </pre>
   421  
   422  <pre>
   423  'a'
   424  'ä'
   425  '本'
   426  '\t'
   427  '\000'
   428  '\007'
   429  '\377'
   430  '\x07'
   431  '\xff'
   432  '\u12e4'
   433  '\U00101234'
   434  '\''         // rune literal containing single quote character
   435  'aa'         // illegal: too many characters
   436  '\xa'        // illegal: too few hexadecimal digits
   437  '\0'         // illegal: too few octal digits
   438  '\uDFFF'     // illegal: surrogate half
   439  '\U00110000' // illegal: invalid Unicode code point
   440  </pre>
   441  
   442  
   443  <h3 id="String_literals">String literals</h3>
   444  
   445  <p>
   446  A string literal represents a <a href="#Constants">string constant</a>
   447  obtained from concatenating a sequence of characters. There are two forms:
   448  raw string literals and interpreted string literals.
   449  </p>
   450  <p>
   451  Raw string literals are character sequences between back quotes, as in
   452  <code>`foo`</code>.  Within the quotes, any character may appear except
   453  back quote. The value of a raw string literal is the
   454  string composed of the uninterpreted (implicitly UTF-8-encoded) characters
   455  between the quotes;
   456  in particular, backslashes have no special meaning and the string may
   457  contain newlines.
   458  Carriage return characters ('\r') inside raw string literals
   459  are discarded from the raw string value.
   460  </p>
   461  <p>
   462  Interpreted string literals are character sequences between double
   463  quotes, as in <code>&quot;bar&quot;</code>.
   464  Within the quotes, any character may appear except newline and unescaped double quote.
   465  The text between the quotes forms the
   466  value of the literal, with backslash escapes interpreted as they
   467  are in <a href="#Rune_literals">rune literals</a> (except that <code>\'</code> is illegal and
   468  <code>\"</code> is legal), with the same restrictions.
   469  The three-digit octal (<code>\</code><i>nnn</i>)
   470  and two-digit hexadecimal (<code>\x</code><i>nn</i>) escapes represent individual
   471  <i>bytes</i> of the resulting string; all other escapes represent
   472  the (possibly multi-byte) UTF-8 encoding of individual <i>characters</i>.
   473  Thus inside a string literal <code>\377</code> and <code>\xFF</code> represent
   474  a single byte of value <code>0xFF</code>=255, while <code>ÿ</code>,
   475  <code>\u00FF</code>, <code>\U000000FF</code> and <code>\xc3\xbf</code> represent
   476  the two bytes <code>0xc3</code> <code>0xbf</code> of the UTF-8 encoding of character
   477  U+00FF.
   478  </p>
   479  
   480  <pre class="ebnf">
   481  string_lit             = raw_string_lit | interpreted_string_lit .
   482  raw_string_lit         = "`" { unicode_char | newline } "`" .
   483  interpreted_string_lit = `"` { unicode_value | byte_value } `"` .
   484  </pre>
   485  
   486  <pre>
   487  `abc`                // same as "abc"
   488  `\n
   489  \n`                  // same as "\\n\n\\n"
   490  "\n"
   491  "\""                 // same as `"`
   492  "Hello, world!\n"
   493  "日本語"
   494  "\u65e5本\U00008a9e"
   495  "\xff\u00FF"
   496  "\uD800"             // illegal: surrogate half
   497  "\U00110000"         // illegal: invalid Unicode code point
   498  </pre>
   499  
   500  <p>
   501  These examples all represent the same string:
   502  </p>
   503  
   504  <pre>
   505  "日本語"                                 // UTF-8 input text
   506  `日本語`                                 // UTF-8 input text as a raw literal
   507  "\u65e5\u672c\u8a9e"                    // the explicit Unicode code points
   508  "\U000065e5\U0000672c\U00008a9e"        // the explicit Unicode code points
   509  "\xe6\x97\xa5\xe6\x9c\xac\xe8\xaa\x9e"  // the explicit UTF-8 bytes
   510  </pre>
   511  
   512  <p>
   513  If the source code represents a character as two code points, such as
   514  a combining form involving an accent and a letter, the result will be
   515  an error if placed in a rune literal (it is not a single code
   516  point), and will appear as two code points if placed in a string
   517  literal.
   518  </p>
   519  
   520  
   521  <h2 id="Constants">Constants</h2>
   522  
   523  <p>There are <i>boolean constants</i>,
   524  <i>rune constants</i>,
   525  <i>integer constants</i>,
   526  <i>floating-point constants</i>, <i>complex constants</i>,
   527  and <i>string constants</i>. Rune, integer, floating-point,
   528  and complex constants are
   529  collectively called <i>numeric constants</i>.
   530  </p>
   531  
   532  <p>
   533  A constant value is represented by a
   534  <a href="#Rune_literals">rune</a>,
   535  <a href="#Integer_literals">integer</a>,
   536  <a href="#Floating-point_literals">floating-point</a>,
   537  <a href="#Imaginary_literals">imaginary</a>,
   538  or
   539  <a href="#String_literals">string</a> literal,
   540  an identifier denoting a constant,
   541  a <a href="#Constant_expressions">constant expression</a>,
   542  a <a href="#Conversions">conversion</a> with a result that is a constant, or
   543  the result value of some built-in functions such as
   544  <code>unsafe.Sizeof</code> applied to any value,
   545  <code>cap</code> or <code>len</code> applied to
   546  <a href="#Length_and_capacity">some expressions</a>,
   547  <code>real</code> and <code>imag</code> applied to a complex constant
   548  and <code>complex</code> applied to numeric constants.
   549  The boolean truth values are represented by the predeclared constants
   550  <code>true</code> and <code>false</code>. The predeclared identifier
   551  <a href="#Iota">iota</a> denotes an integer constant.
   552  </p>
   553  
   554  <p>
   555  In general, complex constants are a form of
   556  <a href="#Constant_expressions">constant expression</a>
   557  and are discussed in that section.
   558  </p>
   559  
   560  <p>
   561  Numeric constants represent values of arbitrary precision and do not overflow.
   562  </p>
   563  
   564  <p>
   565  Constants may be <a href="#Types">typed</a> or <i>untyped</i>.
   566  Literal constants, <code>true</code>, <code>false</code>, <code>iota</code>,
   567  and certain <a href="#Constant_expressions">constant expressions</a>
   568  containing only untyped constant operands are untyped.
   569  </p>
   570  
   571  <p>
   572  A constant may be given a type explicitly by a <a href="#Constant_declarations">constant declaration</a>
   573  or <a href="#Conversions">conversion</a>, or implicitly when used in a
   574  <a href="#Variable_declarations">variable declaration</a> or an
   575  <a href="#Assignments">assignment</a> or as an
   576  operand in an <a href="#Expressions">expression</a>.
   577  It is an error if the constant value
   578  cannot be represented as a value of the respective type.
   579  For instance, <code>3.0</code> can be given any integer or any
   580  floating-point type, while <code>2147483648.0</code> (equal to <code>1&lt;&lt;31</code>)
   581  can be given the types <code>float32</code>, <code>float64</code>, or <code>uint32</code> but
   582  not <code>int32</code> or <code>string</code>.
   583  </p>
   584  
   585  <p>
   586  An untyped constant has a <i>default type</i> which is the type to which the
   587  constant is implicitly converted in contexts where a typed value is required,
   588  for instance, in a <a href="#Short_variable_declarations">short variable declaration</a>
   589  such as <code>i := 0</code> where there is no explicit type.
   590  The default type of an untyped constant is <code>bool</code>, <code>rune</code>,
   591  <code>int</code>, <code>float64</code>, <code>complex128</code> or <code>string</code>
   592  respectively, depending on whether it is a boolean, rune, integer, floating-point,
   593  complex, or string constant.
   594  </p>
   595  
   596  <p>
   597  There are no constants denoting the IEEE-754 infinity and not-a-number values,
   598  but the <a href="/pkg/math/"><code>math</code> package</a>'s
   599  <a href="/pkg/math/#Inf">Inf</a>,
   600  <a href="/pkg/math/#NaN">NaN</a>,
   601  <a href="/pkg/math/#IsInf">IsInf</a>, and
   602  <a href="/pkg/math/#IsNaN">IsNaN</a>
   603  functions return and test for those values at run time.
   604  </p>
   605  
   606  <p>
   607  Implementation restriction: Although numeric constants have arbitrary
   608  precision in the language, a compiler may implement them using an
   609  internal representation with limited precision.  That said, every
   610  implementation must:
   611  </p>
   612  <ul>
   613  	<li>Represent integer constants with at least 256 bits.</li>
   614  
   615  	<li>Represent floating-point constants, including the parts of
   616  	    a complex constant, with a mantissa of at least 256 bits
   617  	    and a signed exponent of at least 32 bits.</li>
   618  
   619  	<li>Give an error if unable to represent an integer constant
   620  	    precisely.</li>
   621  
   622  	<li>Give an error if unable to represent a floating-point or
   623  	    complex constant due to overflow.</li>
   624  
   625  	<li>Round to the nearest representable constant if unable to
   626  	    represent a floating-point or complex constant due to limits
   627  	    on precision.</li>
   628  </ul>
   629  <p>
   630  These requirements apply both to literal constants and to the result
   631  of evaluating <a href="#Constant_expressions">constant
   632  expressions</a>.
   633  </p>
   634  
   635  <h2 id="Variables">Variables</h2>
   636  
   637  <p>
   638  A variable is a storage location for holding a <i>value</i>.
   639  The set of permissible values is determined by the
   640  variable's <i><a href="#Types">type</a></i>.
   641  </p>
   642  
   643  <p>
   644  A <a href="#Variable_declarations">variable declaration</a>
   645  or, for function parameters and results, the signature
   646  of a <a href="#Function_declarations">function declaration</a>
   647  or <a href="#Function_literals">function literal</a> reserves
   648  storage for a named variable.
   649  
   650  Calling the built-in function <a href="#Allocation"><code>new</code></a>
   651  or taking the address of a <a href="#Composite_literals">composite literal</a>
   652  allocates storage for a variable at run time.
   653  Such an anonymous variable is referred to via a (possibly implicit)
   654  <a href="#Address_operators">pointer indirection</a>.
   655  </p>
   656  
   657  <p>
   658  <i>Structured</i> variables of <a href="#Array_types">array</a>, <a href="#Slice_types">slice</a>,
   659  and <a href="#Struct_types">struct</a> types have elements and fields that may
   660  be <a href="#Address_operators">addressed</a> individually. Each such element
   661  acts like a variable.
   662  </p>
   663  
   664  <p>
   665  The <i>static type</i> (or just <i>type</i>) of a variable is the
   666  type given in its declaration, the type provided in the
   667  <code>new</code> call or composite literal, or the type of
   668  an element of a structured variable.
   669  Variables of interface type also have a distinct <i>dynamic type</i>,
   670  which is the concrete type of the value assigned to the variable at run time
   671  (unless the value is the predeclared identifier <code>nil</code>,
   672  which has no type).
   673  The dynamic type may vary during execution but values stored in interface
   674  variables are always <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
   675  to the static type of the variable.
   676  </p>
   677  
   678  <pre>
   679  var x interface{}  // x is nil and has static type interface{}
   680  var v *T           // v has value nil, static type *T
   681  x = 42             // x has value 42 and dynamic type int
   682  x = v              // x has value (*T)(nil) and dynamic type *T
   683  </pre>
   684  
   685  <p>
   686  A variable's value is retrieved by referring to the variable in an
   687  <a href="#Expressions">expression</a>; it is the most recent value
   688  <a href="#Assignments">assigned</a> to the variable.
   689  If a variable has not yet been assigned a value, its value is the
   690  <a href="#The_zero_value">zero value</a> for its type.
   691  </p>
   692  
   693  
   694  <h2 id="Types">Types</h2>
   695  
   696  <p>
   697  A type determines the set of values and operations specific to values of that
   698  type. Types may be <i>named</i> or <i>unnamed</i>. Named types are specified
   699  by a (possibly <a href="#Qualified_identifiers">qualified</a>)
   700  <a href="#Type_declarations"><i>type name</i></a>; unnamed types are specified
   701  using a <i>type literal</i>, which composes a new type from existing types.
   702  </p>
   703  
   704  <pre class="ebnf">
   705  Type      = TypeName | TypeLit | "(" Type ")" .
   706  TypeName  = identifier | QualifiedIdent .
   707  TypeLit   = ArrayType | StructType | PointerType | FunctionType | InterfaceType |
   708  	    SliceType | MapType | ChannelType .
   709  </pre>
   710  
   711  <p>
   712  Named instances of the boolean, numeric, and string types are
   713  <a href="#Predeclared_identifiers">predeclared</a>.
   714  <i>Composite types</i>&mdash;array, struct, pointer, function,
   715  interface, slice, map, and channel types&mdash;may be constructed using
   716  type literals.
   717  </p>
   718  
   719  <p>
   720  Each type <code>T</code> has an <i>underlying type</i>: If <code>T</code>
   721  is one of the predeclared boolean, numeric, or string types, or a type literal,
   722  the corresponding underlying
   723  type is <code>T</code> itself. Otherwise, <code>T</code>'s underlying type
   724  is the underlying type of the type to which <code>T</code> refers in its
   725  <a href="#Type_declarations">type declaration</a>.
   726  </p>
   727  
   728  <pre>
   729     type T1 string
   730     type T2 T1
   731     type T3 []T1
   732     type T4 T3
   733  </pre>
   734  
   735  <p>
   736  The underlying type of <code>string</code>, <code>T1</code>, and <code>T2</code>
   737  is <code>string</code>. The underlying type of <code>[]T1</code>, <code>T3</code>,
   738  and <code>T4</code> is <code>[]T1</code>.
   739  </p>
   740  
   741  <h3 id="Method_sets">Method sets</h3>
   742  <p>
   743  A type may have a <i>method set</i> associated with it.
   744  The method set of an <a href="#Interface_types">interface type</a> is its interface.
   745  The method set of any other type <code>T</code> consists of all
   746  <a href="#Method_declarations">methods</a> declared with receiver type <code>T</code>.
   747  The method set of the corresponding <a href="#Pointer_types">pointer type</a> <code>*T</code>
   748  is the set of all methods declared with receiver <code>*T</code> or <code>T</code>
   749  (that is, it also contains the method set of <code>T</code>).
   750  Further rules apply to structs containing anonymous fields, as described
   751  in the section on <a href="#Struct_types">struct types</a>.
   752  Any other type has an empty method set.
   753  In a method set, each method must have a
   754  <a href="#Uniqueness_of_identifiers">unique</a>
   755  non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> <a href="#MethodName">method name</a>.
   756  </p>
   757  
   758  <p>
   759  The method set of a type determines the interfaces that the
   760  type <a href="#Interface_types">implements</a>
   761  and the methods that can be <a href="#Calls">called</a>
   762  using a receiver of that type.
   763  </p>
   764  
   765  <h3 id="Boolean_types">Boolean types</h3>
   766  
   767  <p>
   768  A <i>boolean type</i> represents the set of Boolean truth values
   769  denoted by the predeclared constants <code>true</code>
   770  and <code>false</code>. The predeclared boolean type is <code>bool</code>.
   771  </p>
   772  
   773  <h3 id="Numeric_types">Numeric types</h3>
   774  
   775  <p>
   776  A <i>numeric type</i> represents sets of integer or floating-point values.
   777  The predeclared architecture-independent numeric types are:
   778  </p>
   779  
   780  <pre class="grammar">
   781  uint8       the set of all unsigned  8-bit integers (0 to 255)
   782  uint16      the set of all unsigned 16-bit integers (0 to 65535)
   783  uint32      the set of all unsigned 32-bit integers (0 to 4294967295)
   784  uint64      the set of all unsigned 64-bit integers (0 to 18446744073709551615)
   785  
   786  int8        the set of all signed  8-bit integers (-128 to 127)
   787  int16       the set of all signed 16-bit integers (-32768 to 32767)
   788  int32       the set of all signed 32-bit integers (-2147483648 to 2147483647)
   789  int64       the set of all signed 64-bit integers (-9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807)
   790  
   791  float32     the set of all IEEE-754 32-bit floating-point numbers
   792  float64     the set of all IEEE-754 64-bit floating-point numbers
   793  
   794  complex64   the set of all complex numbers with float32 real and imaginary parts
   795  complex128  the set of all complex numbers with float64 real and imaginary parts
   796  
   797  byte        alias for uint8
   798  rune        alias for int32
   799  </pre>
   800  
   801  <p>
   802  The value of an <i>n</i>-bit integer is <i>n</i> bits wide and represented using
   803  <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two's_complement">two's complement arithmetic</a>.
   804  </p>
   805  
   806  <p>
   807  There is also a set of predeclared numeric types with implementation-specific sizes:
   808  </p>
   809  
   810  <pre class="grammar">
   811  uint     either 32 or 64 bits
   812  int      same size as uint
   813  uintptr  an unsigned integer large enough to store the uninterpreted bits of a pointer value
   814  </pre>
   815  
   816  <p>
   817  To avoid portability issues all numeric types are distinct except
   818  <code>byte</code>, which is an alias for <code>uint8</code>, and
   819  <code>rune</code>, which is an alias for <code>int32</code>.
   820  Conversions
   821  are required when different numeric types are mixed in an expression
   822  or assignment. For instance, <code>int32</code> and <code>int</code>
   823  are not the same type even though they may have the same size on a
   824  particular architecture.
   825  
   826  
   827  <h3 id="String_types">String types</h3>
   828  
   829  <p>
   830  A <i>string type</i> represents the set of string values.
   831  A string value is a (possibly empty) sequence of bytes.
   832  Strings are immutable: once created,
   833  it is impossible to change the contents of a string.
   834  The predeclared string type is <code>string</code>.
   835  </p>
   836  
   837  <p>
   838  The length of a string <code>s</code> (its size in bytes) can be discovered using
   839  the built-in function <a href="#Length_and_capacity"><code>len</code></a>.
   840  The length is a compile-time constant if the string is a constant.
   841  A string's bytes can be accessed by integer <a href="#Index_expressions">indices</a>
   842  0 through <code>len(s)-1</code>.
   843  It is illegal to take the address of such an element; if
   844  <code>s[i]</code> is the <code>i</code>'th byte of a
   845  string, <code>&amp;s[i]</code> is invalid.
   846  </p>
   847  
   848  
   849  <h3 id="Array_types">Array types</h3>
   850  
   851  <p>
   852  An array is a numbered sequence of elements of a single
   853  type, called the element type.
   854  The number of elements is called the length and is never
   855  negative.
   856  </p>
   857  
   858  <pre class="ebnf">
   859  ArrayType   = "[" ArrayLength "]" ElementType .
   860  ArrayLength = Expression .
   861  ElementType = Type .
   862  </pre>
   863  
   864  <p>
   865  The length is part of the array's type; it must evaluate to a
   866  non-negative <a href="#Constants">constant</a> representable by a value
   867  of type <code>int</code>.
   868  The length of array <code>a</code> can be discovered
   869  using the built-in function <a href="#Length_and_capacity"><code>len</code></a>.
   870  The elements can be addressed by integer <a href="#Index_expressions">indices</a>
   871  0 through <code>len(a)-1</code>.
   872  Array types are always one-dimensional but may be composed to form
   873  multi-dimensional types.
   874  </p>
   875  
   876  <pre>
   877  [32]byte
   878  [2*N] struct { x, y int32 }
   879  [1000]*float64
   880  [3][5]int
   881  [2][2][2]float64  // same as [2]([2]([2]float64))
   882  </pre>
   883  
   884  <h3 id="Slice_types">Slice types</h3>
   885  
   886  <p>
   887  A slice is a descriptor for a contiguous segment of an <i>underlying array</i> and
   888  provides access to a numbered sequence of elements from that array.
   889  A slice type denotes the set of all slices of arrays of its element type.
   890  The value of an uninitialized slice is <code>nil</code>.
   891  </p>
   892  
   893  <pre class="ebnf">
   894  SliceType = "[" "]" ElementType .
   895  </pre>
   896  
   897  <p>
   898  Like arrays, slices are indexable and have a length.  The length of a
   899  slice <code>s</code> can be discovered by the built-in function
   900  <a href="#Length_and_capacity"><code>len</code></a>; unlike with arrays it may change during
   901  execution.  The elements can be addressed by integer <a href="#Index_expressions">indices</a>
   902  0 through <code>len(s)-1</code>.  The slice index of a
   903  given element may be less than the index of the same element in the
   904  underlying array.
   905  </p>
   906  <p>
   907  A slice, once initialized, is always associated with an underlying
   908  array that holds its elements.  A slice therefore shares storage
   909  with its array and with other slices of the same array; by contrast,
   910  distinct arrays always represent distinct storage.
   911  </p>
   912  <p>
   913  The array underlying a slice may extend past the end of the slice.
   914  The <i>capacity</i> is a measure of that extent: it is the sum of
   915  the length of the slice and the length of the array beyond the slice;
   916  a slice of length up to that capacity can be created by
   917  <a href="#Slice_expressions"><i>slicing</i></a> a new one from the original slice.
   918  The capacity of a slice <code>a</code> can be discovered using the
   919  built-in function <a href="#Length_and_capacity"><code>cap(a)</code></a>.
   920  </p>
   921  
   922  <p>
   923  A new, initialized slice value for a given element type <code>T</code> is
   924  made using the built-in function
   925  <a href="#Making_slices_maps_and_channels"><code>make</code></a>,
   926  which takes a slice type
   927  and parameters specifying the length and optionally the capacity.
   928  A slice created with <code>make</code> always allocates a new, hidden array
   929  to which the returned slice value refers. That is, executing
   930  </p>
   931  
   932  <pre>
   933  make([]T, length, capacity)
   934  </pre>
   935  
   936  <p>
   937  produces the same slice as allocating an array and <a href="#Slice_expressions">slicing</a>
   938  it, so these two expressions are equivalent:
   939  </p>
   940  
   941  <pre>
   942  make([]int, 50, 100)
   943  new([100]int)[0:50]
   944  </pre>
   945  
   946  <p>
   947  Like arrays, slices are always one-dimensional but may be composed to construct
   948  higher-dimensional objects.
   949  With arrays of arrays, the inner arrays are, by construction, always the same length;
   950  however with slices of slices (or arrays of slices), the inner lengths may vary dynamically.
   951  Moreover, the inner slices must be initialized individually.
   952  </p>
   953  
   954  <h3 id="Struct_types">Struct types</h3>
   955  
   956  <p>
   957  A struct is a sequence of named elements, called fields, each of which has a
   958  name and a type. Field names may be specified explicitly (IdentifierList) or
   959  implicitly (AnonymousField).
   960  Within a struct, non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> field names must
   961  be <a href="#Uniqueness_of_identifiers">unique</a>.
   962  </p>
   963  
   964  <pre class="ebnf">
   965  StructType     = "struct" "{" { FieldDecl ";" } "}" .
   966  FieldDecl      = (IdentifierList Type | AnonymousField) [ Tag ] .
   967  AnonymousField = [ "*" ] TypeName .
   968  Tag            = string_lit .
   969  </pre>
   970  
   971  <pre>
   972  // An empty struct.
   973  struct {}
   974  
   975  // A struct with 6 fields.
   976  struct {
   977  	x, y int
   978  	u float32
   979  	_ float32  // padding
   980  	A *[]int
   981  	F func()
   982  }
   983  </pre>
   984  
   985  <p>
   986  A field declared with a type but no explicit field name is an <i>anonymous field</i>,
   987  also called an <i>embedded</i> field or an embedding of the type in the struct.
   988  An embedded type must be specified as
   989  a type name <code>T</code> or as a pointer to a non-interface type name <code>*T</code>,
   990  and <code>T</code> itself may not be
   991  a pointer type. The unqualified type name acts as the field name.
   992  </p>
   993  
   994  <pre>
   995  // A struct with four anonymous fields of type T1, *T2, P.T3 and *P.T4
   996  struct {
   997  	T1        // field name is T1
   998  	*T2       // field name is T2
   999  	P.T3      // field name is T3
  1000  	*P.T4     // field name is T4
  1001  	x, y int  // field names are x and y
  1002  }
  1003  </pre>
  1004  
  1005  <p>
  1006  The following declaration is illegal because field names must be unique
  1007  in a struct type:
  1008  </p>
  1009  
  1010  <pre>
  1011  struct {
  1012  	T     // conflicts with anonymous field *T and *P.T
  1013  	*T    // conflicts with anonymous field T and *P.T
  1014  	*P.T  // conflicts with anonymous field T and *T
  1015  }
  1016  </pre>
  1017  
  1018  <p>
  1019  A field or <a href="#Method_declarations">method</a> <code>f</code> of an
  1020  anonymous field in a struct <code>x</code> is called <i>promoted</i> if
  1021  <code>x.f</code> is a legal <a href="#Selectors">selector</a> that denotes
  1022  that field or method <code>f</code>.
  1023  </p>
  1024  
  1025  <p>
  1026  Promoted fields act like ordinary fields
  1027  of a struct except that they cannot be used as field names in
  1028  <a href="#Composite_literals">composite literals</a> of the struct.
  1029  </p>
  1030  
  1031  <p>
  1032  Given a struct type <code>S</code> and a type named <code>T</code>,
  1033  promoted methods are included in the method set of the struct as follows:
  1034  </p>
  1035  <ul>
  1036  	<li>
  1037  	If <code>S</code> contains an anonymous field <code>T</code>,
  1038  	the <a href="#Method_sets">method sets</a> of <code>S</code>
  1039  	and <code>*S</code> both include promoted methods with receiver
  1040  	<code>T</code>. The method set of <code>*S</code> also
  1041  	includes promoted methods with receiver <code>*T</code>.
  1042  	</li>
  1043  
  1044  	<li>
  1045  	If <code>S</code> contains an anonymous field <code>*T</code>,
  1046  	the method sets of <code>S</code> and <code>*S</code> both
  1047  	include promoted methods with receiver <code>T</code> or
  1048  	<code>*T</code>.
  1049  	</li>
  1050  </ul>
  1051  
  1052  <p>
  1053  A field declaration may be followed by an optional string literal <i>tag</i>,
  1054  which becomes an attribute for all the fields in the corresponding
  1055  field declaration. The tags are made
  1056  visible through a <a href="/pkg/reflect/#StructTag">reflection interface</a>
  1057  and take part in <a href="#Type_identity">type identity</a> for structs
  1058  but are otherwise ignored.
  1059  </p>
  1060  
  1061  <pre>
  1062  // A struct corresponding to the TimeStamp protocol buffer.
  1063  // The tag strings define the protocol buffer field numbers.
  1064  struct {
  1065  	microsec  uint64 "field 1"
  1066  	serverIP6 uint64 "field 2"
  1067  	process   string "field 3"
  1068  }
  1069  </pre>
  1070  
  1071  <h3 id="Pointer_types">Pointer types</h3>
  1072  
  1073  <p>
  1074  A pointer type denotes the set of all pointers to <a href="#Variables">variables</a> of a given
  1075  type, called the <i>base type</i> of the pointer.
  1076  The value of an uninitialized pointer is <code>nil</code>.
  1077  </p>
  1078  
  1079  <pre class="ebnf">
  1080  PointerType = "*" BaseType .
  1081  BaseType    = Type .
  1082  </pre>
  1083  
  1084  <pre>
  1085  *Point
  1086  *[4]int
  1087  </pre>
  1088  
  1089  <h3 id="Function_types">Function types</h3>
  1090  
  1091  <p>
  1092  A function type denotes the set of all functions with the same parameter
  1093  and result types. The value of an uninitialized variable of function type
  1094  is <code>nil</code>.
  1095  </p>
  1096  
  1097  <pre class="ebnf">
  1098  FunctionType   = "func" Signature .
  1099  Signature      = Parameters [ Result ] .
  1100  Result         = Parameters | Type .
  1101  Parameters     = "(" [ ParameterList [ "," ] ] ")" .
  1102  ParameterList  = ParameterDecl { "," ParameterDecl } .
  1103  ParameterDecl  = [ IdentifierList ] [ "..." ] Type .
  1104  </pre>
  1105  
  1106  <p>
  1107  Within a list of parameters or results, the names (IdentifierList)
  1108  must either all be present or all be absent. If present, each name
  1109  stands for one item (parameter or result) of the specified type and
  1110  all non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> names in the signature
  1111  must be <a href="#Uniqueness_of_identifiers">unique</a>.
  1112  If absent, each type stands for one item of that type.
  1113  Parameter and result
  1114  lists are always parenthesized except that if there is exactly
  1115  one unnamed result it may be written as an unparenthesized type.
  1116  </p>
  1117  
  1118  <p>
  1119  The final parameter in a function signature may have
  1120  a type prefixed with <code>...</code>.
  1121  A function with such a parameter is called <i>variadic</i> and
  1122  may be invoked with zero or more arguments for that parameter.
  1123  </p>
  1124  
  1125  <pre>
  1126  func()
  1127  func(x int) int
  1128  func(a, _ int, z float32) bool
  1129  func(a, b int, z float32) (bool)
  1130  func(prefix string, values ...int)
  1131  func(a, b int, z float64, opt ...interface{}) (success bool)
  1132  func(int, int, float64) (float64, *[]int)
  1133  func(n int) func(p *T)
  1134  </pre>
  1135  
  1136  
  1137  <h3 id="Interface_types">Interface types</h3>
  1138  
  1139  <p>
  1140  An interface type specifies a <a href="#Method_sets">method set</a> called its <i>interface</i>.
  1141  A variable of interface type can store a value of any type with a method set
  1142  that is any superset of the interface. Such a type is said to
  1143  <i>implement the interface</i>.
  1144  The value of an uninitialized variable of interface type is <code>nil</code>.
  1145  </p>
  1146  
  1147  <pre class="ebnf">
  1148  InterfaceType      = "interface" "{" { MethodSpec ";" } "}" .
  1149  MethodSpec         = MethodName Signature | InterfaceTypeName .
  1150  MethodName         = identifier .
  1151  InterfaceTypeName  = TypeName .
  1152  </pre>
  1153  
  1154  <p>
  1155  As with all method sets, in an interface type, each method must have a
  1156  <a href="#Uniqueness_of_identifiers">unique</a>
  1157  non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> name.
  1158  </p>
  1159  
  1160  <pre>
  1161  // A simple File interface
  1162  interface {
  1163  	Read(b Buffer) bool
  1164  	Write(b Buffer) bool
  1165  	Close()
  1166  }
  1167  </pre>
  1168  
  1169  <p>
  1170  More than one type may implement an interface.
  1171  For instance, if two types <code>S1</code> and <code>S2</code>
  1172  have the method set
  1173  </p>
  1174  
  1175  <pre>
  1176  func (p T) Read(b Buffer) bool { return … }
  1177  func (p T) Write(b Buffer) bool { return … }
  1178  func (p T) Close() { … }
  1179  </pre>
  1180  
  1181  <p>
  1182  (where <code>T</code> stands for either <code>S1</code> or <code>S2</code>)
  1183  then the <code>File</code> interface is implemented by both <code>S1</code> and
  1184  <code>S2</code>, regardless of what other methods
  1185  <code>S1</code> and <code>S2</code> may have or share.
  1186  </p>
  1187  
  1188  <p>
  1189  A type implements any interface comprising any subset of its methods
  1190  and may therefore implement several distinct interfaces. For
  1191  instance, all types implement the <i>empty interface</i>:
  1192  </p>
  1193  
  1194  <pre>
  1195  interface{}
  1196  </pre>
  1197  
  1198  <p>
  1199  Similarly, consider this interface specification,
  1200  which appears within a <a href="#Type_declarations">type declaration</a>
  1201  to define an interface called <code>Locker</code>:
  1202  </p>
  1203  
  1204  <pre>
  1205  type Locker interface {
  1206  	Lock()
  1207  	Unlock()
  1208  }
  1209  </pre>
  1210  
  1211  <p>
  1212  If <code>S1</code> and <code>S2</code> also implement
  1213  </p>
  1214  
  1215  <pre>
  1216  func (p T) Lock() { … }
  1217  func (p T) Unlock() { … }
  1218  </pre>
  1219  
  1220  <p>
  1221  they implement the <code>Locker</code> interface as well
  1222  as the <code>File</code> interface.
  1223  </p>
  1224  
  1225  <p>
  1226  An interface <code>T</code> may use a (possibly qualified) interface type
  1227  name <code>E</code> in place of a method specification. This is called
  1228  <i>embedding</i> interface <code>E</code> in <code>T</code>; it adds
  1229  all (exported and non-exported) methods of <code>E</code> to the interface
  1230  <code>T</code>.
  1231  </p>
  1232  
  1233  <pre>
  1234  type ReadWriter interface {
  1235  	Read(b Buffer) bool
  1236  	Write(b Buffer) bool
  1237  }
  1238  
  1239  type File interface {
  1240  	ReadWriter  // same as adding the methods of ReadWriter
  1241  	Locker      // same as adding the methods of Locker
  1242  	Close()
  1243  }
  1244  
  1245  type LockedFile interface {
  1246  	Locker
  1247  	File        // illegal: Lock, Unlock not unique
  1248  	Lock()      // illegal: Lock not unique
  1249  }
  1250  </pre>
  1251  
  1252  <p>
  1253  An interface type <code>T</code> may not embed itself
  1254  or any interface type that embeds <code>T</code>, recursively.
  1255  </p>
  1256  
  1257  <pre>
  1258  // illegal: Bad cannot embed itself
  1259  type Bad interface {
  1260  	Bad
  1261  }
  1262  
  1263  // illegal: Bad1 cannot embed itself using Bad2
  1264  type Bad1 interface {
  1265  	Bad2
  1266  }
  1267  type Bad2 interface {
  1268  	Bad1
  1269  }
  1270  </pre>
  1271  
  1272  <h3 id="Map_types">Map types</h3>
  1273  
  1274  <p>
  1275  A map is an unordered group of elements of one type, called the
  1276  element type, indexed by a set of unique <i>keys</i> of another type,
  1277  called the key type.
  1278  The value of an uninitialized map is <code>nil</code>.
  1279  </p>
  1280  
  1281  <pre class="ebnf">
  1282  MapType     = "map" "[" KeyType "]" ElementType .
  1283  KeyType     = Type .
  1284  </pre>
  1285  
  1286  <p>
  1287  The <a href="#Comparison_operators">comparison operators</a>
  1288  <code>==</code> and <code>!=</code> must be fully defined
  1289  for operands of the key type; thus the key type must not be a function, map, or
  1290  slice.
  1291  If the key type is an interface type, these
  1292  comparison operators must be defined for the dynamic key values;
  1293  failure will cause a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  1294  
  1295  </p>
  1296  
  1297  <pre>
  1298  map[string]int
  1299  map[*T]struct{ x, y float64 }
  1300  map[string]interface{}
  1301  </pre>
  1302  
  1303  <p>
  1304  The number of map elements is called its length.
  1305  For a map <code>m</code>, it can be discovered using the
  1306  built-in function <a href="#Length_and_capacity"><code>len</code></a>
  1307  and may change during execution. Elements may be added during execution
  1308  using <a href="#Assignments">assignments</a> and retrieved with
  1309  <a href="#Index_expressions">index expressions</a>; they may be removed with the
  1310  <a href="#Deletion_of_map_elements"><code>delete</code></a> built-in function.
  1311  </p>
  1312  <p>
  1313  A new, empty map value is made using the built-in
  1314  function <a href="#Making_slices_maps_and_channels"><code>make</code></a>,
  1315  which takes the map type and an optional capacity hint as arguments:
  1316  </p>
  1317  
  1318  <pre>
  1319  make(map[string]int)
  1320  make(map[string]int, 100)
  1321  </pre>
  1322  
  1323  <p>
  1324  The initial capacity does not bound its size:
  1325  maps grow to accommodate the number of items
  1326  stored in them, with the exception of <code>nil</code> maps.
  1327  A <code>nil</code> map is equivalent to an empty map except that no elements
  1328  may be added.
  1329  
  1330  <h3 id="Channel_types">Channel types</h3>
  1331  
  1332  <p>
  1333  A channel provides a mechanism for
  1334  <a href="#Go_statements">concurrently executing functions</a>
  1335  to communicate by
  1336  <a href="#Send_statements">sending</a> and
  1337  <a href="#Receive_operator">receiving</a>
  1338  values of a specified element type.
  1339  The value of an uninitialized channel is <code>nil</code>.
  1340  </p>
  1341  
  1342  <pre class="ebnf">
  1343  ChannelType = ( "chan" | "chan" "&lt;-" | "&lt;-" "chan" ) ElementType .
  1344  </pre>
  1345  
  1346  <p>
  1347  The optional <code>&lt;-</code> operator specifies the channel <i>direction</i>,
  1348  <i>send</i> or <i>receive</i>. If no direction is given, the channel is
  1349  <i>bidirectional</i>.
  1350  A channel may be constrained only to send or only to receive by
  1351  <a href="#Conversions">conversion</a> or <a href="#Assignments">assignment</a>.
  1352  </p>
  1353  
  1354  <pre>
  1355  chan T          // can be used to send and receive values of type T
  1356  chan&lt;- float64  // can only be used to send float64s
  1357  &lt;-chan int      // can only be used to receive ints
  1358  </pre>
  1359  
  1360  <p>
  1361  The <code>&lt;-</code> operator associates with the leftmost <code>chan</code>
  1362  possible:
  1363  </p>
  1364  
  1365  <pre>
  1366  chan&lt;- chan int    // same as chan&lt;- (chan int)
  1367  chan&lt;- &lt;-chan int  // same as chan&lt;- (&lt;-chan int)
  1368  &lt;-chan &lt;-chan int  // same as &lt;-chan (&lt;-chan int)
  1369  chan (&lt;-chan int)
  1370  </pre>
  1371  
  1372  <p>
  1373  A new, initialized channel
  1374  value can be made using the built-in function
  1375  <a href="#Making_slices_maps_and_channels"><code>make</code></a>,
  1376  which takes the channel type and an optional <i>capacity</i> as arguments:
  1377  </p>
  1378  
  1379  <pre>
  1380  make(chan int, 100)
  1381  </pre>
  1382  
  1383  <p>
  1384  The capacity, in number of elements, sets the size of the buffer in the channel.
  1385  If the capacity is zero or absent, the channel is unbuffered and communication
  1386  succeeds only when both a sender and receiver are ready. Otherwise, the channel
  1387  is buffered and communication succeeds without blocking if the buffer
  1388  is not full (sends) or not empty (receives).
  1389  A <code>nil</code> channel is never ready for communication.
  1390  </p>
  1391  
  1392  <p>
  1393  A channel may be closed with the built-in function
  1394  <a href="#Close"><code>close</code></a>.
  1395  The multi-valued assignment form of the
  1396  <a href="#Receive_operator">receive operator</a>
  1397  reports whether a received value was sent before
  1398  the channel was closed.
  1399  </p>
  1400  
  1401  <p>
  1402  A single channel may be used in
  1403  <a href="#Send_statements">send statements</a>,
  1404  <a href="#Receive_operator">receive operations</a>,
  1405  and calls to the built-in functions
  1406  <a href="#Length_and_capacity"><code>cap</code></a> and
  1407  <a href="#Length_and_capacity"><code>len</code></a>
  1408  by any number of goroutines without further synchronization.
  1409  Channels act as first-in-first-out queues.
  1410  For example, if one goroutine sends values on a channel
  1411  and a second goroutine receives them, the values are
  1412  received in the order sent.
  1413  </p>
  1414  
  1415  <h2 id="Properties_of_types_and_values">Properties of types and values</h2>
  1416  
  1417  <h3 id="Type_identity">Type identity</h3>
  1418  
  1419  <p>
  1420  Two types are either <i>identical</i> or <i>different</i>.
  1421  </p>
  1422  
  1423  <p>
  1424  Two <a href="#Types">named types</a> are identical if their type names originate in the same
  1425  <a href="#Type_declarations">TypeSpec</a>.
  1426  A named and an <a href="#Types">unnamed type</a> are always different. Two unnamed types are identical
  1427  if the corresponding type literals are identical, that is, if they have the same
  1428  literal structure and corresponding components have identical types. In detail:
  1429  </p>
  1430  
  1431  <ul>
  1432  	<li>Two array types are identical if they have identical element types and
  1433  	    the same array length.</li>
  1434  
  1435  	<li>Two slice types are identical if they have identical element types.</li>
  1436  
  1437  	<li>Two struct types are identical if they have the same sequence of fields,
  1438  	    and if corresponding fields have the same names, and identical types,
  1439  	    and identical tags.
  1440  	    Two anonymous fields are considered to have the same name. Lower-case field
  1441  	    names from different packages are always different.</li>
  1442  
  1443  	<li>Two pointer types are identical if they have identical base types.</li>
  1444  
  1445  	<li>Two function types are identical if they have the same number of parameters
  1446  	    and result values, corresponding parameter and result types are
  1447  	    identical, and either both functions are variadic or neither is.
  1448  	    Parameter and result names are not required to match.</li>
  1449  
  1450  	<li>Two interface types are identical if they have the same set of methods
  1451  	    with the same names and identical function types. Lower-case method names from
  1452  	    different packages are always different. The order of the methods is irrelevant.</li>
  1453  
  1454  	<li>Two map types are identical if they have identical key and value types.</li>
  1455  
  1456  	<li>Two channel types are identical if they have identical value types and
  1457  	    the same direction.</li>
  1458  </ul>
  1459  
  1460  <p>
  1461  Given the declarations
  1462  </p>
  1463  
  1464  <pre>
  1465  type (
  1466  	T0 []string
  1467  	T1 []string
  1468  	T2 struct{ a, b int }
  1469  	T3 struct{ a, c int }
  1470  	T4 func(int, float64) *T0
  1471  	T5 func(x int, y float64) *[]string
  1472  )
  1473  </pre>
  1474  
  1475  <p>
  1476  these types are identical:
  1477  </p>
  1478  
  1479  <pre>
  1480  T0 and T0
  1481  []int and []int
  1482  struct{ a, b *T5 } and struct{ a, b *T5 }
  1483  func(x int, y float64) *[]string and func(int, float64) (result *[]string)
  1484  </pre>
  1485  
  1486  <p>
  1487  <code>T0</code> and <code>T1</code> are different because they are named types
  1488  with distinct declarations; <code>func(int, float64) *T0</code> and
  1489  <code>func(x int, y float64) *[]string</code> are different because <code>T0</code>
  1490  is different from <code>[]string</code>.
  1491  </p>
  1492  
  1493  
  1494  <h3 id="Assignability">Assignability</h3>
  1495  
  1496  <p>
  1497  A value <code>x</code> is <i>assignable</i> to a <a href="#Variables">variable</a> of type <code>T</code>
  1498  ("<code>x</code> is assignable to <code>T</code>") in any of these cases:
  1499  </p>
  1500  
  1501  <ul>
  1502  <li>
  1503  <code>x</code>'s type is identical to <code>T</code>.
  1504  </li>
  1505  <li>
  1506  <code>x</code>'s type <code>V</code> and <code>T</code> have identical
  1507  <a href="#Types">underlying types</a> and at least one of <code>V</code>
  1508  or <code>T</code> is not a <a href="#Types">named type</a>.
  1509  </li>
  1510  <li>
  1511  <code>T</code> is an interface type and
  1512  <code>x</code> <a href="#Interface_types">implements</a> <code>T</code>.
  1513  </li>
  1514  <li>
  1515  <code>x</code> is a bidirectional channel value, <code>T</code> is a channel type,
  1516  <code>x</code>'s type <code>V</code> and <code>T</code> have identical element types,
  1517  and at least one of <code>V</code> or <code>T</code> is not a named type.
  1518  </li>
  1519  <li>
  1520  <code>x</code> is the predeclared identifier <code>nil</code> and <code>T</code>
  1521  is a pointer, function, slice, map, channel, or interface type.
  1522  </li>
  1523  <li>
  1524  <code>x</code> is an untyped <a href="#Constants">constant</a> representable
  1525  by a value of type <code>T</code>.
  1526  </li>
  1527  </ul>
  1528  
  1529  
  1530  <h2 id="Blocks">Blocks</h2>
  1531  
  1532  <p>
  1533  A <i>block</i> is a possibly empty sequence of declarations and statements
  1534  within matching brace brackets.
  1535  </p>
  1536  
  1537  <pre class="ebnf">
  1538  Block = "{" StatementList "}" .
  1539  StatementList = { Statement ";" } .
  1540  </pre>
  1541  
  1542  <p>
  1543  In addition to explicit blocks in the source code, there are implicit blocks:
  1544  </p>
  1545  
  1546  <ol>
  1547  	<li>The <i>universe block</i> encompasses all Go source text.</li>
  1548  
  1549  	<li>Each <a href="#Packages">package</a> has a <i>package block</i> containing all
  1550  	    Go source text for that package.</li>
  1551  
  1552  	<li>Each file has a <i>file block</i> containing all Go source text
  1553  	    in that file.</li>
  1554  
  1555  	<li>Each <a href="#If_statements">"if"</a>,
  1556  	    <a href="#For_statements">"for"</a>, and
  1557  	    <a href="#Switch_statements">"switch"</a>
  1558  	    statement is considered to be in its own implicit block.</li>
  1559  
  1560  	<li>Each clause in a <a href="#Switch_statements">"switch"</a>
  1561  	    or <a href="#Select_statements">"select"</a> statement
  1562  	    acts as an implicit block.</li>
  1563  </ol>
  1564  
  1565  <p>
  1566  Blocks nest and influence <a href="#Declarations_and_scope">scoping</a>.
  1567  </p>
  1568  
  1569  
  1570  <h2 id="Declarations_and_scope">Declarations and scope</h2>
  1571  
  1572  <p>
  1573  A <i>declaration</i> binds a non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> identifier to a
  1574  <a href="#Constant_declarations">constant</a>,
  1575  <a href="#Type_declarations">type</a>,
  1576  <a href="#Variable_declarations">variable</a>,
  1577  <a href="#Function_declarations">function</a>,
  1578  <a href="#Labeled_statements">label</a>, or
  1579  <a href="#Import_declarations">package</a>.
  1580  Every identifier in a program must be declared.
  1581  No identifier may be declared twice in the same block, and
  1582  no identifier may be declared in both the file and package block.
  1583  </p>
  1584  
  1585  <p>
  1586  The <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank identifier</a> may be used like any other identifier
  1587  in a declaration, but it does not introduce a binding and thus is not declared.
  1588  In the package block, the identifier <code>init</code> may only be used for
  1589  <a href="#Package_initialization"><code>init</code> function</a> declarations,
  1590  and like the blank identifier it does not introduce a new binding.
  1591  </p>
  1592  
  1593  <pre class="ebnf">
  1594  Declaration   = ConstDecl | TypeDecl | VarDecl .
  1595  TopLevelDecl  = Declaration | FunctionDecl | MethodDecl .
  1596  </pre>
  1597  
  1598  <p>
  1599  The <i>scope</i> of a declared identifier is the extent of source text in which
  1600  the identifier denotes the specified constant, type, variable, function, label, or package.
  1601  </p>
  1602  
  1603  <p>
  1604  Go is lexically scoped using <a href="#Blocks">blocks</a>:
  1605  </p>
  1606  
  1607  <ol>
  1608  	<li>The scope of a <a href="#Predeclared_identifiers">predeclared identifier</a> is the universe block.</li>
  1609  
  1610  	<li>The scope of an identifier denoting a constant, type, variable,
  1611  	    or function (but not method) declared at top level (outside any
  1612  	    function) is the package block.</li>
  1613  
  1614  	<li>The scope of the package name of an imported package is the file block
  1615  	    of the file containing the import declaration.</li>
  1616  
  1617  	<li>The scope of an identifier denoting a method receiver, function parameter,
  1618  	    or result variable is the function body.</li>
  1619  
  1620  	<li>The scope of a constant or variable identifier declared
  1621  	    inside a function begins at the end of the ConstSpec or VarSpec
  1622  	    (ShortVarDecl for short variable declarations)
  1623  	    and ends at the end of the innermost containing block.</li>
  1624  
  1625  	<li>The scope of a type identifier declared inside a function
  1626  	    begins at the identifier in the TypeSpec
  1627  	    and ends at the end of the innermost containing block.</li>
  1628  </ol>
  1629  
  1630  <p>
  1631  An identifier declared in a block may be redeclared in an inner block.
  1632  While the identifier of the inner declaration is in scope, it denotes
  1633  the entity declared by the inner declaration.
  1634  </p>
  1635  
  1636  <p>
  1637  The <a href="#Package_clause">package clause</a> is not a declaration; the package name
  1638  does not appear in any scope. Its purpose is to identify the files belonging
  1639  to the same <a href="#Packages">package</a> and to specify the default package name for import
  1640  declarations.
  1641  </p>
  1642  
  1643  
  1644  <h3 id="Label_scopes">Label scopes</h3>
  1645  
  1646  <p>
  1647  Labels are declared by <a href="#Labeled_statements">labeled statements</a> and are
  1648  used in the <a href="#Break_statements">"break"</a>,
  1649  <a href="#Continue_statements">"continue"</a>, and
  1650  <a href="#Goto_statements">"goto"</a> statements.
  1651  It is illegal to define a label that is never used.
  1652  In contrast to other identifiers, labels are not block scoped and do
  1653  not conflict with identifiers that are not labels. The scope of a label
  1654  is the body of the function in which it is declared and excludes
  1655  the body of any nested function.
  1656  </p>
  1657  
  1658  
  1659  <h3 id="Blank_identifier">Blank identifier</h3>
  1660  
  1661  <p>
  1662  The <i>blank identifier</i> is represented by the underscore character <code>_</code>.
  1663  It serves as an anonymous placeholder instead of a regular (non-blank)
  1664  identifier and has special meaning in <a href="#Declarations_and_scope">declarations</a>,
  1665  as an <a href="#Operands">operand</a>, and in <a href="#Assignments">assignments</a>.
  1666  </p>
  1667  
  1668  
  1669  <h3 id="Predeclared_identifiers">Predeclared identifiers</h3>
  1670  
  1671  <p>
  1672  The following identifiers are implicitly declared in the
  1673  <a href="#Blocks">universe block</a>:
  1674  </p>
  1675  <pre class="grammar">
  1676  Types:
  1677  	bool byte complex64 complex128 error float32 float64
  1678  	int int8 int16 int32 int64 rune string
  1679  	uint uint8 uint16 uint32 uint64 uintptr
  1680  
  1681  Constants:
  1682  	true false iota
  1683  
  1684  Zero value:
  1685  	nil
  1686  
  1687  Functions:
  1688  	append cap close complex copy delete imag len
  1689  	make new panic print println real recover
  1690  </pre>
  1691  
  1692  
  1693  <h3 id="Exported_identifiers">Exported identifiers</h3>
  1694  
  1695  <p>
  1696  An identifier may be <i>exported</i> to permit access to it from another package.
  1697  An identifier is exported if both:
  1698  </p>
  1699  <ol>
  1700  	<li>the first character of the identifier's name is a Unicode upper case
  1701  	letter (Unicode class "Lu"); and</li>
  1702  	<li>the identifier is declared in the <a href="#Blocks">package block</a>
  1703  	or it is a <a href="#Struct_types">field name</a> or
  1704  	<a href="#MethodName">method name</a>.</li>
  1705  </ol>
  1706  <p>
  1707  All other identifiers are not exported.
  1708  </p>
  1709  
  1710  
  1711  <h3 id="Uniqueness_of_identifiers">Uniqueness of identifiers</h3>
  1712  
  1713  <p>
  1714  Given a set of identifiers, an identifier is called <i>unique</i> if it is
  1715  <i>different</i> from every other in the set.
  1716  Two identifiers are different if they are spelled differently, or if they
  1717  appear in different <a href="#Packages">packages</a> and are not
  1718  <a href="#Exported_identifiers">exported</a>. Otherwise, they are the same.
  1719  </p>
  1720  
  1721  <h3 id="Constant_declarations">Constant declarations</h3>
  1722  
  1723  <p>
  1724  A constant declaration binds a list of identifiers (the names of
  1725  the constants) to the values of a list of <a href="#Constant_expressions">constant expressions</a>.
  1726  The number of identifiers must be equal
  1727  to the number of expressions, and the <i>n</i>th identifier on
  1728  the left is bound to the value of the <i>n</i>th expression on the
  1729  right.
  1730  </p>
  1731  
  1732  <pre class="ebnf">
  1733  ConstDecl      = "const" ( ConstSpec | "(" { ConstSpec ";" } ")" ) .
  1734  ConstSpec      = IdentifierList [ [ Type ] "=" ExpressionList ] .
  1735  
  1736  IdentifierList = identifier { "," identifier } .
  1737  ExpressionList = Expression { "," Expression } .
  1738  </pre>
  1739  
  1740  <p>
  1741  If the type is present, all constants take the type specified, and
  1742  the expressions must be <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a> to that type.
  1743  If the type is omitted, the constants take the
  1744  individual types of the corresponding expressions.
  1745  If the expression values are untyped <a href="#Constants">constants</a>,
  1746  the declared constants remain untyped and the constant identifiers
  1747  denote the constant values. For instance, if the expression is a
  1748  floating-point literal, the constant identifier denotes a floating-point
  1749  constant, even if the literal's fractional part is zero.
  1750  </p>
  1751  
  1752  <pre>
  1753  const Pi float64 = 3.14159265358979323846
  1754  const zero = 0.0         // untyped floating-point constant
  1755  const (
  1756  	size int64 = 1024
  1757  	eof        = -1  // untyped integer constant
  1758  )
  1759  const a, b, c = 3, 4, "foo"  // a = 3, b = 4, c = "foo", untyped integer and string constants
  1760  const u, v float32 = 0, 3    // u = 0.0, v = 3.0
  1761  </pre>
  1762  
  1763  <p>
  1764  Within a parenthesized <code>const</code> declaration list the
  1765  expression list may be omitted from any but the first declaration.
  1766  Such an empty list is equivalent to the textual substitution of the
  1767  first preceding non-empty expression list and its type if any.
  1768  Omitting the list of expressions is therefore equivalent to
  1769  repeating the previous list.  The number of identifiers must be equal
  1770  to the number of expressions in the previous list.
  1771  Together with the <a href="#Iota"><code>iota</code> constant generator</a>
  1772  this mechanism permits light-weight declaration of sequential values:
  1773  </p>
  1774  
  1775  <pre>
  1776  const (
  1777  	Sunday = iota
  1778  	Monday
  1779  	Tuesday
  1780  	Wednesday
  1781  	Thursday
  1782  	Friday
  1783  	Partyday
  1784  	numberOfDays  // this constant is not exported
  1785  )
  1786  </pre>
  1787  
  1788  
  1789  <h3 id="Iota">Iota</h3>
  1790  
  1791  <p>
  1792  Within a <a href="#Constant_declarations">constant declaration</a>, the predeclared identifier
  1793  <code>iota</code> represents successive untyped integer <a href="#Constants">
  1794  constants</a>. It is reset to 0 whenever the reserved word <code>const</code>
  1795  appears in the source and increments after each <a href="#ConstSpec">ConstSpec</a>.
  1796  It can be used to construct a set of related constants:
  1797  </p>
  1798  
  1799  <pre>
  1800  const (  // iota is reset to 0
  1801  	c0 = iota  // c0 == 0
  1802  	c1 = iota  // c1 == 1
  1803  	c2 = iota  // c2 == 2
  1804  )
  1805  
  1806  const (
  1807  	a = 1 &lt;&lt; iota  // a == 1 (iota has been reset)
  1808  	b = 1 &lt;&lt; iota  // b == 2
  1809  	c = 1 &lt;&lt; iota  // c == 4
  1810  )
  1811  
  1812  const (
  1813  	u         = iota * 42  // u == 0     (untyped integer constant)
  1814  	v float64 = iota * 42  // v == 42.0  (float64 constant)
  1815  	w         = iota * 42  // w == 84    (untyped integer constant)
  1816  )
  1817  
  1818  const x = iota  // x == 0 (iota has been reset)
  1819  const y = iota  // y == 0 (iota has been reset)
  1820  </pre>
  1821  
  1822  <p>
  1823  Within an ExpressionList, the value of each <code>iota</code> is the same because
  1824  it is only incremented after each ConstSpec:
  1825  </p>
  1826  
  1827  <pre>
  1828  const (
  1829  	bit0, mask0 = 1 &lt;&lt; iota, 1&lt;&lt;iota - 1  // bit0 == 1, mask0 == 0
  1830  	bit1, mask1                           // bit1 == 2, mask1 == 1
  1831  	_, _                                  // skips iota == 2
  1832  	bit3, mask3                           // bit3 == 8, mask3 == 7
  1833  )
  1834  </pre>
  1835  
  1836  <p>
  1837  This last example exploits the implicit repetition of the
  1838  last non-empty expression list.
  1839  </p>
  1840  
  1841  
  1842  <h3 id="Type_declarations">Type declarations</h3>
  1843  
  1844  <p>
  1845  A type declaration binds an identifier, the <i>type name</i>, to a new type
  1846  that has the same <a href="#Types">underlying type</a> as an existing type,
  1847  and operations defined for the existing type are also defined for the new type.
  1848  The new type is <a href="#Type_identity">different</a> from the existing type.
  1849  </p>
  1850  
  1851  <pre class="ebnf">
  1852  TypeDecl     = "type" ( TypeSpec | "(" { TypeSpec ";" } ")" ) .
  1853  TypeSpec     = identifier Type .
  1854  </pre>
  1855  
  1856  <pre>
  1857  type IntArray [16]int
  1858  
  1859  type (
  1860  	Point struct{ x, y float64 }
  1861  	Polar Point
  1862  )
  1863  
  1864  type TreeNode struct {
  1865  	left, right *TreeNode
  1866  	value *Comparable
  1867  }
  1868  
  1869  type Block interface {
  1870  	BlockSize() int
  1871  	Encrypt(src, dst []byte)
  1872  	Decrypt(src, dst []byte)
  1873  }
  1874  </pre>
  1875  
  1876  <p>
  1877  The declared type does not inherit any <a href="#Method_declarations">methods</a>
  1878  bound to the existing type, but the <a href="#Method_sets">method set</a>
  1879  of an interface type or of elements of a composite type remains unchanged:
  1880  </p>
  1881  
  1882  <pre>
  1883  // A Mutex is a data type with two methods, Lock and Unlock.
  1884  type Mutex struct         { /* Mutex fields */ }
  1885  func (m *Mutex) Lock()    { /* Lock implementation */ }
  1886  func (m *Mutex) Unlock()  { /* Unlock implementation */ }
  1887  
  1888  // NewMutex has the same composition as Mutex but its method set is empty.
  1889  type NewMutex Mutex
  1890  
  1891  // The method set of the <a href="#Pointer_types">base type</a> of PtrMutex remains unchanged,
  1892  // but the method set of PtrMutex is empty.
  1893  type PtrMutex *Mutex
  1894  
  1895  // The method set of *PrintableMutex contains the methods
  1896  // Lock and Unlock bound to its anonymous field Mutex.
  1897  type PrintableMutex struct {
  1898  	Mutex
  1899  }
  1900  
  1901  // MyBlock is an interface type that has the same method set as Block.
  1902  type MyBlock Block
  1903  </pre>
  1904  
  1905  <p>
  1906  A type declaration may be used to define a different boolean, numeric, or string
  1907  type and attach methods to it:
  1908  </p>
  1909  
  1910  <pre>
  1911  type TimeZone int
  1912  
  1913  const (
  1914  	EST TimeZone = -(5 + iota)
  1915  	CST
  1916  	MST
  1917  	PST
  1918  )
  1919  
  1920  func (tz TimeZone) String() string {
  1921  	return fmt.Sprintf("GMT%+dh", tz)
  1922  }
  1923  </pre>
  1924  
  1925  
  1926  <h3 id="Variable_declarations">Variable declarations</h3>
  1927  
  1928  <p>
  1929  A variable declaration creates one or more variables, binds corresponding
  1930  identifiers to them, and gives each a type and an initial value.
  1931  </p>
  1932  
  1933  <pre class="ebnf">
  1934  VarDecl     = "var" ( VarSpec | "(" { VarSpec ";" } ")" ) .
  1935  VarSpec     = IdentifierList ( Type [ "=" ExpressionList ] | "=" ExpressionList ) .
  1936  </pre>
  1937  
  1938  <pre>
  1939  var i int
  1940  var U, V, W float64
  1941  var k = 0
  1942  var x, y float32 = -1, -2
  1943  var (
  1944  	i       int
  1945  	u, v, s = 2.0, 3.0, "bar"
  1946  )
  1947  var re, im = complexSqrt(-1)
  1948  var _, found = entries[name]  // map lookup; only interested in "found"
  1949  </pre>
  1950  
  1951  <p>
  1952  If a list of expressions is given, the variables are initialized
  1953  with the expressions following the rules for <a href="#Assignments">assignments</a>.
  1954  Otherwise, each variable is initialized to its <a href="#The_zero_value">zero value</a>.
  1955  </p>
  1956  
  1957  <p>
  1958  If a type is present, each variable is given that type.
  1959  Otherwise, each variable is given the type of the corresponding
  1960  initialization value in the assignment.
  1961  If that value is an untyped constant, it is first
  1962  <a href="#Conversions">converted</a> to its <a href="#Constants">default type</a>;
  1963  if it is an untyped boolean value, it is first converted to type <code>bool</code>.
  1964  The predeclared value <code>nil</code> cannot be used to initialize a variable
  1965  with no explicit type.
  1966  </p>
  1967  
  1968  <pre>
  1969  var d = math.Sin(0.5)  // d is float64
  1970  var i = 42             // i is int
  1971  var t, ok = x.(T)      // t is T, ok is bool
  1972  var n = nil            // illegal
  1973  </pre>
  1974  
  1975  <p>
  1976  Implementation restriction: A compiler may make it illegal to declare a variable
  1977  inside a <a href="#Function_declarations">function body</a> if the variable is
  1978  never used.
  1979  </p>
  1980  
  1981  <h3 id="Short_variable_declarations">Short variable declarations</h3>
  1982  
  1983  <p>
  1984  A <i>short variable declaration</i> uses the syntax:
  1985  </p>
  1986  
  1987  <pre class="ebnf">
  1988  ShortVarDecl = IdentifierList ":=" ExpressionList .
  1989  </pre>
  1990  
  1991  <p>
  1992  It is shorthand for a regular <a href="#Variable_declarations">variable declaration</a>
  1993  with initializer expressions but no types:
  1994  </p>
  1995  
  1996  <pre class="grammar">
  1997  "var" IdentifierList = ExpressionList .
  1998  </pre>
  1999  
  2000  <pre>
  2001  i, j := 0, 10
  2002  f := func() int { return 7 }
  2003  ch := make(chan int)
  2004  r, w := os.Pipe(fd)  // os.Pipe() returns two values
  2005  _, y, _ := coord(p)  // coord() returns three values; only interested in y coordinate
  2006  </pre>
  2007  
  2008  <p>
  2009  Unlike regular variable declarations, a short variable declaration may <i>redeclare</i>
  2010  variables provided they were originally declared earlier in the same block
  2011  (or the parameter lists if the block is the function body) with the same type, 
  2012  and at least one of the non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> variables is new.
  2013  As a consequence, redeclaration can only appear in a multi-variable short declaration.
  2014  Redeclaration does not introduce a new variable; it just assigns a new value to the original.
  2015  </p>
  2016  
  2017  <pre>
  2018  field1, offset := nextField(str, 0)
  2019  field2, offset := nextField(str, offset)  // redeclares offset
  2020  a, a := 1, 2                              // illegal: double declaration of a or no new variable if a was declared elsewhere
  2021  </pre>
  2022  
  2023  <p>
  2024  Short variable declarations may appear only inside functions.
  2025  In some contexts such as the initializers for
  2026  <a href="#If_statements">"if"</a>,
  2027  <a href="#For_statements">"for"</a>, or
  2028  <a href="#Switch_statements">"switch"</a> statements,
  2029  they can be used to declare local temporary variables.
  2030  </p>
  2031  
  2032  <h3 id="Function_declarations">Function declarations</h3>
  2033  
  2034  <p>
  2035  A function declaration binds an identifier, the <i>function name</i>,
  2036  to a function.
  2037  </p>
  2038  
  2039  <pre class="ebnf">
  2040  FunctionDecl = "func" FunctionName ( Function | Signature ) .
  2041  FunctionName = identifier .
  2042  Function     = Signature FunctionBody .
  2043  FunctionBody = Block .
  2044  </pre>
  2045  
  2046  <p>
  2047  If the function's <a href="#Function_types">signature</a> declares
  2048  result parameters, the function body's statement list must end in
  2049  a <a href="#Terminating_statements">terminating statement</a>.
  2050  </p>
  2051  
  2052  <pre>
  2053  func IndexRune(s string, r rune) int {
  2054  	for i, c := range s {
  2055  		if c == r {
  2056  			return i
  2057  		}
  2058  	}
  2059  	// invalid: missing return statement
  2060  }
  2061  </pre>
  2062  
  2063  <p>
  2064  A function declaration may omit the body. Such a declaration provides the
  2065  signature for a function implemented outside Go, such as an assembly routine.
  2066  </p>
  2067  
  2068  <pre>
  2069  func min(x int, y int) int {
  2070  	if x &lt; y {
  2071  		return x
  2072  	}
  2073  	return y
  2074  }
  2075  
  2076  func flushICache(begin, end uintptr)  // implemented externally
  2077  </pre>
  2078  
  2079  <h3 id="Method_declarations">Method declarations</h3>
  2080  
  2081  <p>
  2082  A method is a <a href="#Function_declarations">function</a> with a <i>receiver</i>.
  2083  A method declaration binds an identifier, the <i>method name</i>, to a method,
  2084  and associates the method with the receiver's <i>base type</i>.
  2085  </p>
  2086  
  2087  <pre class="ebnf">
  2088  MethodDecl   = "func" Receiver MethodName ( Function | Signature ) .
  2089  Receiver     = Parameters .
  2090  </pre>
  2091  
  2092  <p>
  2093  The receiver is specified via an extra parameter section preceding the method
  2094  name. That parameter section must declare a single parameter, the receiver.
  2095  Its type must be of the form <code>T</code> or <code>*T</code> (possibly using
  2096  parentheses) where <code>T</code> is a type name. The type denoted by <code>T</code> is called
  2097  the receiver <i>base type</i>; it must not be a pointer or interface type and
  2098  it must be declared in the same package as the method.
  2099  The method is said to be <i>bound</i> to the base type and the method name
  2100  is visible only within <a href="#Selectors">selectors</a> for type <code>T</code>
  2101  or <code>*T</code>.
  2102  </p>
  2103  
  2104  <p>
  2105  A non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> receiver identifier must be
  2106  <a href="#Uniqueness_of_identifiers">unique</a> in the method signature.
  2107  If the receiver's value is not referenced inside the body of the method,
  2108  its identifier may be omitted in the declaration. The same applies in
  2109  general to parameters of functions and methods.
  2110  </p>
  2111  
  2112  <p>
  2113  For a base type, the non-blank names of methods bound to it must be unique.
  2114  If the base type is a <a href="#Struct_types">struct type</a>,
  2115  the non-blank method and field names must be distinct.
  2116  </p>
  2117  
  2118  <p>
  2119  Given type <code>Point</code>, the declarations
  2120  </p>
  2121  
  2122  <pre>
  2123  func (p *Point) Length() float64 {
  2124  	return math.Sqrt(p.x * p.x + p.y * p.y)
  2125  }
  2126  
  2127  func (p *Point) Scale(factor float64) {
  2128  	p.x *= factor
  2129  	p.y *= factor
  2130  }
  2131  </pre>
  2132  
  2133  <p>
  2134  bind the methods <code>Length</code> and <code>Scale</code>,
  2135  with receiver type <code>*Point</code>,
  2136  to the base type <code>Point</code>.
  2137  </p>
  2138  
  2139  <p>
  2140  The type of a method is the type of a function with the receiver as first
  2141  argument.  For instance, the method <code>Scale</code> has type
  2142  </p>
  2143  
  2144  <pre>
  2145  func(p *Point, factor float64)
  2146  </pre>
  2147  
  2148  <p>
  2149  However, a function declared this way is not a method.
  2150  </p>
  2151  
  2152  
  2153  <h2 id="Expressions">Expressions</h2>
  2154  
  2155  <p>
  2156  An expression specifies the computation of a value by applying
  2157  operators and functions to operands.
  2158  </p>
  2159  
  2160  <h3 id="Operands">Operands</h3>
  2161  
  2162  <p>
  2163  Operands denote the elementary values in an expression. An operand may be a
  2164  literal, a (possibly <a href="#Qualified_identifiers">qualified</a>)
  2165  non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> identifier denoting a
  2166  <a href="#Constant_declarations">constant</a>,
  2167  <a href="#Variable_declarations">variable</a>, or
  2168  <a href="#Function_declarations">function</a>,
  2169  a <a href="#Method_expressions">method expression</a> yielding a function,
  2170  or a parenthesized expression.
  2171  </p>
  2172  
  2173  <p>
  2174  The <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank identifier</a> may appear as an
  2175  operand only on the left-hand side of an <a href="#Assignments">assignment</a>.
  2176  </p>
  2177  
  2178  <pre class="ebnf">
  2179  Operand     = Literal | OperandName | MethodExpr | "(" Expression ")" .
  2180  Literal     = BasicLit | CompositeLit | FunctionLit .
  2181  BasicLit    = int_lit | float_lit | imaginary_lit | rune_lit | string_lit .
  2182  OperandName = identifier | QualifiedIdent.
  2183  </pre>
  2184  
  2185  <h3 id="Qualified_identifiers">Qualified identifiers</h3>
  2186  
  2187  <p>
  2188  A qualified identifier is an identifier qualified with a package name prefix.
  2189  Both the package name and the identifier must not be
  2190  <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a>.
  2191  </p>
  2192  
  2193  <pre class="ebnf">
  2194  QualifiedIdent = PackageName "." identifier .
  2195  </pre>
  2196  
  2197  <p>
  2198  A qualified identifier accesses an identifier in a different package, which
  2199  must be <a href="#Import_declarations">imported</a>.
  2200  The identifier must be <a href="#Exported_identifiers">exported</a> and
  2201  declared in the <a href="#Blocks">package block</a> of that package.
  2202  </p>
  2203  
  2204  <pre>
  2205  math.Sin	// denotes the Sin function in package math
  2206  </pre>
  2207  
  2208  <h3 id="Composite_literals">Composite literals</h3>
  2209  
  2210  <p>
  2211  Composite literals construct values for structs, arrays, slices, and maps
  2212  and create a new value each time they are evaluated.
  2213  They consist of the type of the literal followed by a brace-bound list of elements.
  2214  Each element may optionally be preceded by a corresponding key.
  2215  </p>
  2216  
  2217  <pre class="ebnf">
  2218  CompositeLit  = LiteralType LiteralValue .
  2219  LiteralType   = StructType | ArrayType | "[" "..." "]" ElementType |
  2220                  SliceType | MapType | TypeName .
  2221  LiteralValue  = "{" [ ElementList [ "," ] ] "}" .
  2222  ElementList   = KeyedElement { "," KeyedElement } .
  2223  KeyedElement  = [ Key ":" ] Element .
  2224  Key           = FieldName | Expression | LiteralValue .
  2225  FieldName     = identifier .
  2226  Element       = Expression | LiteralValue .
  2227  </pre>
  2228  
  2229  <p>
  2230  The LiteralType's underlying type must be a struct, array, slice, or map type
  2231  (the grammar enforces this constraint except when the type is given
  2232  as a TypeName).
  2233  The types of the elements and keys must be <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  2234  to the respective field, element, and key types of the literal type;
  2235  there is no additional conversion.
  2236  The key is interpreted as a field name for struct literals,
  2237  an index for array and slice literals, and a key for map literals.
  2238  For map literals, all elements must have a key. It is an error
  2239  to specify multiple elements with the same field name or
  2240  constant key value.
  2241  </p>
  2242  
  2243  <p>
  2244  For struct literals the following rules apply:
  2245  </p>
  2246  <ul>
  2247  	<li>A key must be a field name declared in the struct type.
  2248  	</li>
  2249  	<li>An element list that does not contain any keys must
  2250  	    list an element for each struct field in the
  2251  	    order in which the fields are declared.
  2252  	</li>
  2253  	<li>If any element has a key, every element must have a key.
  2254  	</li>
  2255  	<li>An element list that contains keys does not need to
  2256  	    have an element for each struct field. Omitted fields
  2257  	    get the zero value for that field.
  2258  	</li>
  2259  	<li>A literal may omit the element list; such a literal evaluates
  2260  	    to the zero value for its type.
  2261  	</li>
  2262  	<li>It is an error to specify an element for a non-exported
  2263  	    field of a struct belonging to a different package.
  2264  	</li>
  2265  </ul>
  2266  
  2267  <p>
  2268  Given the declarations
  2269  </p>
  2270  <pre>
  2271  type Point3D struct { x, y, z float64 }
  2272  type Line struct { p, q Point3D }
  2273  </pre>
  2274  
  2275  <p>
  2276  one may write
  2277  </p>
  2278  
  2279  <pre>
  2280  origin := Point3D{}                            // zero value for Point3D
  2281  line := Line{origin, Point3D{y: -4, z: 12.3}}  // zero value for line.q.x
  2282  </pre>
  2283  
  2284  <p>
  2285  For array and slice literals the following rules apply:
  2286  </p>
  2287  <ul>
  2288  	<li>Each element has an associated integer index marking
  2289  	    its position in the array.
  2290  	</li>
  2291  	<li>An element with a key uses the key as its index; the
  2292  	    key must be a constant integer expression.
  2293  	</li>
  2294  	<li>An element without a key uses the previous element's index plus one.
  2295  	    If the first element has no key, its index is zero.
  2296  	</li>
  2297  </ul>
  2298  
  2299  <p>
  2300  <a href="#Address_operators">Taking the address</a> of a composite literal
  2301  generates a pointer to a unique <a href="#Variables">variable</a> initialized
  2302  with the literal's value.
  2303  </p>
  2304  <pre>
  2305  var pointer *Point3D = &amp;Point3D{y: 1000}
  2306  </pre>
  2307  
  2308  <p>
  2309  The length of an array literal is the length specified in the literal type.
  2310  If fewer elements than the length are provided in the literal, the missing
  2311  elements are set to the zero value for the array element type.
  2312  It is an error to provide elements with index values outside the index range
  2313  of the array. The notation <code>...</code> specifies an array length equal
  2314  to the maximum element index plus one.
  2315  </p>
  2316  
  2317  <pre>
  2318  buffer := [10]string{}             // len(buffer) == 10
  2319  intSet := [6]int{1, 2, 3, 5}       // len(intSet) == 6
  2320  days := [...]string{"Sat", "Sun"}  // len(days) == 2
  2321  </pre>
  2322  
  2323  <p>
  2324  A slice literal describes the entire underlying array literal.
  2325  Thus, the length and capacity of a slice literal are the maximum
  2326  element index plus one. A slice literal has the form
  2327  </p>
  2328  
  2329  <pre>
  2330  []T{x1, x2, … xn}
  2331  </pre>
  2332  
  2333  <p>
  2334  and is shorthand for a slice operation applied to an array:
  2335  </p>
  2336  
  2337  <pre>
  2338  tmp := [n]T{x1, x2, … xn}
  2339  tmp[0 : n]
  2340  </pre>
  2341  
  2342  <p>
  2343  Within a composite literal of array, slice, or map type <code>T</code>,
  2344  elements or map keys that are themselves composite literals may elide the respective
  2345  literal type if it is identical to the element or key type of <code>T</code>.
  2346  Similarly, elements or keys that are addresses of composite literals may elide
  2347  the <code>&amp;T</code> when the element or key type is <code>*T</code>.
  2348  </p>
  2349  
  2350  <pre>
  2351  [...]Point{{1.5, -3.5}, {0, 0}}     // same as [...]Point{Point{1.5, -3.5}, Point{0, 0}}
  2352  [][]int{{1, 2, 3}, {4, 5}}          // same as [][]int{[]int{1, 2, 3}, []int{4, 5}}
  2353  [][]Point{{{0, 1}, {1, 2}}}         // same as [][]Point{[]Point{Point{0, 1}, Point{1, 2}}}
  2354  map[string]Point{"orig": {0, 0}}    // same as map[string]Point{"orig": Point{0, 0}}
  2355  
  2356  [...]*Point{{1.5, -3.5}, {0, 0}}    // same as [...]*Point{&amp;Point{1.5, -3.5}, &amp;Point{0, 0}}
  2357  
  2358  map[Point]string{{0, 0}: "orig"}    // same as map[Point]string{Point{0, 0}: "orig"}
  2359  </pre>
  2360  
  2361  <p>
  2362  A parsing ambiguity arises when a composite literal using the
  2363  TypeName form of the LiteralType appears as an operand between the
  2364  <a href="#Keywords">keyword</a> and the opening brace of the block
  2365  of an "if", "for", or "switch" statement, and the composite literal
  2366  is not enclosed in parentheses, square brackets, or curly braces.
  2367  In this rare case, the opening brace of the literal is erroneously parsed
  2368  as the one introducing the block of statements. To resolve the ambiguity,
  2369  the composite literal must appear within parentheses.
  2370  </p>
  2371  
  2372  <pre>
  2373  if x == (T{a,b,c}[i]) { … }
  2374  if (x == T{a,b,c}[i]) { … }
  2375  </pre>
  2376  
  2377  <p>
  2378  Examples of valid array, slice, and map literals:
  2379  </p>
  2380  
  2381  <pre>
  2382  // list of prime numbers
  2383  primes := []int{2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 2147483647}
  2384  
  2385  // vowels[ch] is true if ch is a vowel
  2386  vowels := [128]bool{'a': true, 'e': true, 'i': true, 'o': true, 'u': true, 'y': true}
  2387  
  2388  // the array [10]float32{-1, 0, 0, 0, -0.1, -0.1, 0, 0, 0, -1}
  2389  filter := [10]float32{-1, 4: -0.1, -0.1, 9: -1}
  2390  
  2391  // frequencies in Hz for equal-tempered scale (A4 = 440Hz)
  2392  noteFrequency := map[string]float32{
  2393  	"C0": 16.35, "D0": 18.35, "E0": 20.60, "F0": 21.83,
  2394  	"G0": 24.50, "A0": 27.50, "B0": 30.87,
  2395  }
  2396  </pre>
  2397  
  2398  
  2399  <h3 id="Function_literals">Function literals</h3>
  2400  
  2401  <p>
  2402  A function literal represents an anonymous <a href="#Function_declarations">function</a>.
  2403  </p>
  2404  
  2405  <pre class="ebnf">
  2406  FunctionLit = "func" Function .
  2407  </pre>
  2408  
  2409  <pre>
  2410  func(a, b int, z float64) bool { return a*b &lt; int(z) }
  2411  </pre>
  2412  
  2413  <p>
  2414  A function literal can be assigned to a variable or invoked directly.
  2415  </p>
  2416  
  2417  <pre>
  2418  f := func(x, y int) int { return x + y }
  2419  func(ch chan int) { ch &lt;- ACK }(replyChan)
  2420  </pre>
  2421  
  2422  <p>
  2423  Function literals are <i>closures</i>: they may refer to variables
  2424  defined in a surrounding function. Those variables are then shared between
  2425  the surrounding function and the function literal, and they survive as long
  2426  as they are accessible.
  2427  </p>
  2428  
  2429  
  2430  <h3 id="Primary_expressions">Primary expressions</h3>
  2431  
  2432  <p>
  2433  Primary expressions are the operands for unary and binary expressions.
  2434  </p>
  2435  
  2436  <pre class="ebnf">
  2437  PrimaryExpr =
  2438  	Operand |
  2439  	Conversion |
  2440  	PrimaryExpr Selector |
  2441  	PrimaryExpr Index |
  2442  	PrimaryExpr Slice |
  2443  	PrimaryExpr TypeAssertion |
  2444  	PrimaryExpr Arguments .
  2445  
  2446  Selector       = "." identifier .
  2447  Index          = "[" Expression "]" .
  2448  Slice          = "[" ( [ Expression ] ":" [ Expression ] ) |
  2449                       ( [ Expression ] ":" Expression ":" Expression )
  2450                   "]" .
  2451  TypeAssertion  = "." "(" Type ")" .
  2452  Arguments      = "(" [ ( ExpressionList | Type [ "," ExpressionList ] ) [ "..." ] [ "," ] ] ")" .
  2453  </pre>
  2454  
  2455  
  2456  <pre>
  2457  x
  2458  2
  2459  (s + ".txt")
  2460  f(3.1415, true)
  2461  Point{1, 2}
  2462  m["foo"]
  2463  s[i : j + 1]
  2464  obj.color
  2465  f.p[i].x()
  2466  </pre>
  2467  
  2468  
  2469  <h3 id="Selectors">Selectors</h3>
  2470  
  2471  <p>
  2472  For a <a href="#Primary_expressions">primary expression</a> <code>x</code>
  2473  that is not a <a href="#Package_clause">package name</a>, the
  2474  <i>selector expression</i>
  2475  </p>
  2476  
  2477  <pre>
  2478  x.f
  2479  </pre>
  2480  
  2481  <p>
  2482  denotes the field or method <code>f</code> of the value <code>x</code>
  2483  (or sometimes <code>*x</code>; see below).
  2484  The identifier <code>f</code> is called the (field or method) <i>selector</i>;
  2485  it must not be the <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank identifier</a>.
  2486  The type of the selector expression is the type of <code>f</code>.
  2487  If <code>x</code> is a package name, see the section on
  2488  <a href="#Qualified_identifiers">qualified identifiers</a>.
  2489  </p>
  2490  
  2491  <p>
  2492  A selector <code>f</code> may denote a field or method <code>f</code> of
  2493  a type <code>T</code>, or it may refer
  2494  to a field or method <code>f</code> of a nested
  2495  <a href="#Struct_types">anonymous field</a> of <code>T</code>.
  2496  The number of anonymous fields traversed
  2497  to reach <code>f</code> is called its <i>depth</i> in <code>T</code>.
  2498  The depth of a field or method <code>f</code>
  2499  declared in <code>T</code> is zero.
  2500  The depth of a field or method <code>f</code> declared in
  2501  an anonymous field <code>A</code> in <code>T</code> is the
  2502  depth of <code>f</code> in <code>A</code> plus one.
  2503  </p>
  2504  
  2505  <p>
  2506  The following rules apply to selectors:
  2507  </p>
  2508  
  2509  <ol>
  2510  <li>
  2511  For a value <code>x</code> of type <code>T</code> or <code>*T</code>
  2512  where <code>T</code> is not a pointer or interface type,
  2513  <code>x.f</code> denotes the field or method at the shallowest depth
  2514  in <code>T</code> where there
  2515  is such an <code>f</code>.
  2516  If there is not exactly <a href="#Uniqueness_of_identifiers">one <code>f</code></a>
  2517  with shallowest depth, the selector expression is illegal.
  2518  </li>
  2519  
  2520  <li>
  2521  For a value <code>x</code> of type <code>I</code> where <code>I</code>
  2522  is an interface type, <code>x.f</code> denotes the actual method with name
  2523  <code>f</code> of the dynamic value of <code>x</code>.
  2524  If there is no method with name <code>f</code> in the
  2525  <a href="#Method_sets">method set</a> of <code>I</code>, the selector
  2526  expression is illegal.
  2527  </li>
  2528  
  2529  <li>
  2530  As an exception, if the type of <code>x</code> is a named pointer type
  2531  and <code>(*x).f</code> is a valid selector expression denoting a field
  2532  (but not a method), <code>x.f</code> is shorthand for <code>(*x).f</code>.
  2533  </li>
  2534  
  2535  <li>
  2536  In all other cases, <code>x.f</code> is illegal.
  2537  </li>
  2538  
  2539  <li>
  2540  If <code>x</code> is of pointer type and has the value
  2541  <code>nil</code> and <code>x.f</code> denotes a struct field,
  2542  assigning to or evaluating <code>x.f</code>
  2543  causes a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  2544  </li>
  2545  
  2546  <li>
  2547  If <code>x</code> is of interface type and has the value
  2548  <code>nil</code>, <a href="#Calls">calling</a> or
  2549  <a href="#Method_values">evaluating</a> the method <code>x.f</code>
  2550  causes a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  2551  </li>
  2552  </ol>
  2553  
  2554  <p>
  2555  For example, given the declarations:
  2556  </p>
  2557  
  2558  <pre>
  2559  type T0 struct {
  2560  	x int
  2561  }
  2562  
  2563  func (*T0) M0()
  2564  
  2565  type T1 struct {
  2566  	y int
  2567  }
  2568  
  2569  func (T1) M1()
  2570  
  2571  type T2 struct {
  2572  	z int
  2573  	T1
  2574  	*T0
  2575  }
  2576  
  2577  func (*T2) M2()
  2578  
  2579  type Q *T2
  2580  
  2581  var t T2     // with t.T0 != nil
  2582  var p *T2    // with p != nil and (*p).T0 != nil
  2583  var q Q = p
  2584  </pre>
  2585  
  2586  <p>
  2587  one may write:
  2588  </p>
  2589  
  2590  <pre>
  2591  t.z          // t.z
  2592  t.y          // t.T1.y
  2593  t.x          // (*t.T0).x
  2594  
  2595  p.z          // (*p).z
  2596  p.y          // (*p).T1.y
  2597  p.x          // (*(*p).T0).x
  2598  
  2599  q.x          // (*(*q).T0).x        (*q).x is a valid field selector
  2600  
  2601  p.M0()       // ((*p).T0).M0()      M0 expects *T0 receiver
  2602  p.M1()       // ((*p).T1).M1()      M1 expects T1 receiver
  2603  p.M2()       // p.M2()              M2 expects *T2 receiver
  2604  t.M2()       // (&amp;t).M2()           M2 expects *T2 receiver, see section on Calls
  2605  </pre>
  2606  
  2607  <p>
  2608  but the following is invalid:
  2609  </p>
  2610  
  2611  <pre>
  2612  q.M0()       // (*q).M0 is valid but not a field selector
  2613  </pre>
  2614  
  2615  
  2616  <h3 id="Method_expressions">Method expressions</h3>
  2617  
  2618  <p>
  2619  If <code>M</code> is in the <a href="#Method_sets">method set</a> of type <code>T</code>,
  2620  <code>T.M</code> is a function that is callable as a regular function
  2621  with the same arguments as <code>M</code> prefixed by an additional
  2622  argument that is the receiver of the method.
  2623  </p>
  2624  
  2625  <pre class="ebnf">
  2626  MethodExpr    = ReceiverType "." MethodName .
  2627  ReceiverType  = TypeName | "(" "*" TypeName ")" | "(" ReceiverType ")" .
  2628  </pre>
  2629  
  2630  <p>
  2631  Consider a struct type <code>T</code> with two methods,
  2632  <code>Mv</code>, whose receiver is of type <code>T</code>, and
  2633  <code>Mp</code>, whose receiver is of type <code>*T</code>.
  2634  </p>
  2635  
  2636  <pre>
  2637  type T struct {
  2638  	a int
  2639  }
  2640  func (tv  T) Mv(a int) int         { return 0 }  // value receiver
  2641  func (tp *T) Mp(f float32) float32 { return 1 }  // pointer receiver
  2642  
  2643  var t T
  2644  </pre>
  2645  
  2646  <p>
  2647  The expression
  2648  </p>
  2649  
  2650  <pre>
  2651  T.Mv
  2652  </pre>
  2653  
  2654  <p>
  2655  yields a function equivalent to <code>Mv</code> but
  2656  with an explicit receiver as its first argument; it has signature
  2657  </p>
  2658  
  2659  <pre>
  2660  func(tv T, a int) int
  2661  </pre>
  2662  
  2663  <p>
  2664  That function may be called normally with an explicit receiver, so
  2665  these five invocations are equivalent:
  2666  </p>
  2667  
  2668  <pre>
  2669  t.Mv(7)
  2670  T.Mv(t, 7)
  2671  (T).Mv(t, 7)
  2672  f1 := T.Mv; f1(t, 7)
  2673  f2 := (T).Mv; f2(t, 7)
  2674  </pre>
  2675  
  2676  <p>
  2677  Similarly, the expression
  2678  </p>
  2679  
  2680  <pre>
  2681  (*T).Mp
  2682  </pre>
  2683  
  2684  <p>
  2685  yields a function value representing <code>Mp</code> with signature
  2686  </p>
  2687  
  2688  <pre>
  2689  func(tp *T, f float32) float32
  2690  </pre>
  2691  
  2692  <p>
  2693  For a method with a value receiver, one can derive a function
  2694  with an explicit pointer receiver, so
  2695  </p>
  2696  
  2697  <pre>
  2698  (*T).Mv
  2699  </pre>
  2700  
  2701  <p>
  2702  yields a function value representing <code>Mv</code> with signature
  2703  </p>
  2704  
  2705  <pre>
  2706  func(tv *T, a int) int
  2707  </pre>
  2708  
  2709  <p>
  2710  Such a function indirects through the receiver to create a value
  2711  to pass as the receiver to the underlying method;
  2712  the method does not overwrite the value whose address is passed in
  2713  the function call.
  2714  </p>
  2715  
  2716  <p>
  2717  The final case, a value-receiver function for a pointer-receiver method,
  2718  is illegal because pointer-receiver methods are not in the method set
  2719  of the value type.
  2720  </p>
  2721  
  2722  <p>
  2723  Function values derived from methods are called with function call syntax;
  2724  the receiver is provided as the first argument to the call.
  2725  That is, given <code>f := T.Mv</code>, <code>f</code> is invoked
  2726  as <code>f(t, 7)</code> not <code>t.f(7)</code>.
  2727  To construct a function that binds the receiver, use a
  2728  <a href="#Function_literals">function literal</a> or
  2729  <a href="#Method_values">method value</a>.
  2730  </p>
  2731  
  2732  <p>
  2733  It is legal to derive a function value from a method of an interface type.
  2734  The resulting function takes an explicit receiver of that interface type.
  2735  </p>
  2736  
  2737  <h3 id="Method_values">Method values</h3>
  2738  
  2739  <p>
  2740  If the expression <code>x</code> has static type <code>T</code> and
  2741  <code>M</code> is in the <a href="#Method_sets">method set</a> of type <code>T</code>,
  2742  <code>x.M</code> is called a <i>method value</i>.
  2743  The method value <code>x.M</code> is a function value that is callable
  2744  with the same arguments as a method call of <code>x.M</code>.
  2745  The expression <code>x</code> is evaluated and saved during the evaluation of the
  2746  method value; the saved copy is then used as the receiver in any calls,
  2747  which may be executed later.
  2748  </p>
  2749  
  2750  <p>
  2751  The type <code>T</code> may be an interface or non-interface type.
  2752  </p>
  2753  
  2754  <p>
  2755  As in the discussion of <a href="#Method_expressions">method expressions</a> above,
  2756  consider a struct type <code>T</code> with two methods,
  2757  <code>Mv</code>, whose receiver is of type <code>T</code>, and
  2758  <code>Mp</code>, whose receiver is of type <code>*T</code>.
  2759  </p>
  2760  
  2761  <pre>
  2762  type T struct {
  2763  	a int
  2764  }
  2765  func (tv  T) Mv(a int) int         { return 0 }  // value receiver
  2766  func (tp *T) Mp(f float32) float32 { return 1 }  // pointer receiver
  2767  
  2768  var t T
  2769  var pt *T
  2770  func makeT() T
  2771  </pre>
  2772  
  2773  <p>
  2774  The expression
  2775  </p>
  2776  
  2777  <pre>
  2778  t.Mv
  2779  </pre>
  2780  
  2781  <p>
  2782  yields a function value of type
  2783  </p>
  2784  
  2785  <pre>
  2786  func(int) int
  2787  </pre>
  2788  
  2789  <p>
  2790  These two invocations are equivalent:
  2791  </p>
  2792  
  2793  <pre>
  2794  t.Mv(7)
  2795  f := t.Mv; f(7)
  2796  </pre>
  2797  
  2798  <p>
  2799  Similarly, the expression
  2800  </p>
  2801  
  2802  <pre>
  2803  pt.Mp
  2804  </pre>
  2805  
  2806  <p>
  2807  yields a function value of type
  2808  </p>
  2809  
  2810  <pre>
  2811  func(float32) float32
  2812  </pre>
  2813  
  2814  <p>
  2815  As with <a href="#Selectors">selectors</a>, a reference to a non-interface method with a value receiver
  2816  using a pointer will automatically dereference that pointer: <code>pt.Mv</code> is equivalent to <code>(*pt).Mv</code>.
  2817  </p>
  2818  
  2819  <p>
  2820  As with <a href="#Calls">method calls</a>, a reference to a non-interface method with a pointer receiver
  2821  using an addressable value will automatically take the address of that value: <code>t.Mp</code> is equivalent to <code>(&amp;t).Mp</code>.
  2822  </p>
  2823  
  2824  <pre>
  2825  f := t.Mv; f(7)   // like t.Mv(7)
  2826  f := pt.Mp; f(7)  // like pt.Mp(7)
  2827  f := pt.Mv; f(7)  // like (*pt).Mv(7)
  2828  f := t.Mp; f(7)   // like (&amp;t).Mp(7)
  2829  f := makeT().Mp   // invalid: result of makeT() is not addressable
  2830  </pre>
  2831  
  2832  <p>
  2833  Although the examples above use non-interface types, it is also legal to create a method value
  2834  from a value of interface type.
  2835  </p>
  2836  
  2837  <pre>
  2838  var i interface { M(int) } = myVal
  2839  f := i.M; f(7)  // like i.M(7)
  2840  </pre>
  2841  
  2842  
  2843  <h3 id="Index_expressions">Index expressions</h3>
  2844  
  2845  <p>
  2846  A primary expression of the form
  2847  </p>
  2848  
  2849  <pre>
  2850  a[x]
  2851  </pre>
  2852  
  2853  <p>
  2854  denotes the element of the array, pointer to array, slice, string or map <code>a</code> indexed by <code>x</code>.
  2855  The value <code>x</code> is called the <i>index</i> or <i>map key</i>, respectively.
  2856  The following rules apply:
  2857  </p>
  2858  
  2859  <p>
  2860  If <code>a</code> is not a map:
  2861  </p>
  2862  <ul>
  2863  	<li>the index <code>x</code> must be of integer type or untyped;
  2864  	    it is <i>in range</i> if <code>0 &lt;= x &lt; len(a)</code>,
  2865  	    otherwise it is <i>out of range</i></li>
  2866  	<li>a <a href="#Constants">constant</a> index must be non-negative
  2867  	    and representable by a value of type <code>int</code>
  2868  </ul>
  2869  
  2870  <p>
  2871  For <code>a</code> of <a href="#Array_types">array type</a> <code>A</code>:
  2872  </p>
  2873  <ul>
  2874  	<li>a <a href="#Constants">constant</a> index must be in range</li>
  2875  	<li>if <code>x</code> is out of range at run time,
  2876  	    a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> occurs</li>
  2877  	<li><code>a[x]</code> is the array element at index <code>x</code> and the type of
  2878  	    <code>a[x]</code> is the element type of <code>A</code></li>
  2879  </ul>
  2880  
  2881  <p>
  2882  For <code>a</code> of <a href="#Pointer_types">pointer</a> to array type:
  2883  </p>
  2884  <ul>
  2885  	<li><code>a[x]</code> is shorthand for <code>(*a)[x]</code></li>
  2886  </ul>
  2887  
  2888  <p>
  2889  For <code>a</code> of <a href="#Slice_types">slice type</a> <code>S</code>:
  2890  </p>
  2891  <ul>
  2892  	<li>if <code>x</code> is out of range at run time,
  2893  	    a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> occurs</li>
  2894  	<li><code>a[x]</code> is the slice element at index <code>x</code> and the type of
  2895  	    <code>a[x]</code> is the element type of <code>S</code></li>
  2896  </ul>
  2897  
  2898  <p>
  2899  For <code>a</code> of <a href="#String_types">string type</a>:
  2900  </p>
  2901  <ul>
  2902  	<li>a <a href="#Constants">constant</a> index must be in range
  2903  	    if the string <code>a</code> is also constant</li>
  2904  	<li>if <code>x</code> is out of range at run time,
  2905  	    a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> occurs</li>
  2906  	<li><code>a[x]</code> is the non-constant byte value at index <code>x</code> and the type of
  2907  	    <code>a[x]</code> is <code>byte</code></li>
  2908  	<li><code>a[x]</code> may not be assigned to</li>
  2909  </ul>
  2910  
  2911  <p>
  2912  For <code>a</code> of <a href="#Map_types">map type</a> <code>M</code>:
  2913  </p>
  2914  <ul>
  2915  	<li><code>x</code>'s type must be
  2916  	    <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  2917  	    to the key type of <code>M</code></li>
  2918  	<li>if the map contains an entry with key <code>x</code>,
  2919  	    <code>a[x]</code> is the map value with key <code>x</code>
  2920  	    and the type of <code>a[x]</code> is the value type of <code>M</code></li>
  2921  	<li>if the map is <code>nil</code> or does not contain such an entry,
  2922  	    <code>a[x]</code> is the <a href="#The_zero_value">zero value</a>
  2923  	    for the value type of <code>M</code></li>
  2924  </ul>
  2925  
  2926  <p>
  2927  Otherwise <code>a[x]</code> is illegal.
  2928  </p>
  2929  
  2930  <p>
  2931  An index expression on a map <code>a</code> of type <code>map[K]V</code>
  2932  used in an <a href="#Assignments">assignment</a> or initialization of the special form
  2933  </p>
  2934  
  2935  <pre>
  2936  v, ok = a[x]
  2937  v, ok := a[x]
  2938  var v, ok = a[x]
  2939  </pre>
  2940  
  2941  <p>
  2942  yields an additional untyped boolean value. The value of <code>ok</code> is
  2943  <code>true</code> if the key <code>x</code> is present in the map, and
  2944  <code>false</code> otherwise.
  2945  </p>
  2946  
  2947  <p>
  2948  Assigning to an element of a <code>nil</code> map causes a
  2949  <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  2950  </p>
  2951  
  2952  
  2953  <h3 id="Slice_expressions">Slice expressions</h3>
  2954  
  2955  <p>
  2956  Slice expressions construct a substring or slice from a string, array, pointer
  2957  to array, or slice. There are two variants: a simple form that specifies a low
  2958  and high bound, and a full form that also specifies a bound on the capacity.
  2959  </p>
  2960  
  2961  <h4>Simple slice expressions</h4>
  2962  
  2963  <p>
  2964  For a string, array, pointer to array, or slice <code>a</code>, the primary expression
  2965  </p>
  2966  
  2967  <pre>
  2968  a[low : high]
  2969  </pre>
  2970  
  2971  <p>
  2972  constructs a substring or slice. The <i>indices</i> <code>low</code> and
  2973  <code>high</code> select which elements of operand <code>a</code> appear
  2974  in the result. The result has indices starting at 0 and length equal to
  2975  <code>high</code>&nbsp;-&nbsp;<code>low</code>.
  2976  After slicing the array <code>a</code>
  2977  </p>
  2978  
  2979  <pre>
  2980  a := [5]int{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
  2981  s := a[1:4]
  2982  </pre>
  2983  
  2984  <p>
  2985  the slice <code>s</code> has type <code>[]int</code>, length 3, capacity 4, and elements
  2986  </p>
  2987  
  2988  <pre>
  2989  s[0] == 2
  2990  s[1] == 3
  2991  s[2] == 4
  2992  </pre>
  2993  
  2994  <p>
  2995  For convenience, any of the indices may be omitted. A missing <code>low</code>
  2996  index defaults to zero; a missing <code>high</code> index defaults to the length of the
  2997  sliced operand:
  2998  </p>
  2999  
  3000  <pre>
  3001  a[2:]  // same as a[2 : len(a)]
  3002  a[:3]  // same as a[0 : 3]
  3003  a[:]   // same as a[0 : len(a)]
  3004  </pre>
  3005  
  3006  <p>
  3007  If <code>a</code> is a pointer to an array, <code>a[low : high]</code> is shorthand for
  3008  <code>(*a)[low : high]</code>.
  3009  </p>
  3010  
  3011  <p>
  3012  For arrays or strings, the indices are <i>in range</i> if
  3013  <code>0</code> &lt;= <code>low</code> &lt;= <code>high</code> &lt;= <code>len(a)</code>,
  3014  otherwise they are <i>out of range</i>.
  3015  For slices, the upper index bound is the slice capacity <code>cap(a)</code> rather than the length.
  3016  A <a href="#Constants">constant</a> index must be non-negative and representable by a value of type
  3017  <code>int</code>; for arrays or constant strings, constant indices must also be in range.
  3018  If both indices are constant, they must satisfy <code>low &lt;= high</code>.
  3019  If the indices are out of range at run time, a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> occurs.
  3020  </p>
  3021  
  3022  <p>
  3023  Except for <a href="#Constants">untyped strings</a>, if the sliced operand is a string or slice,
  3024  the result of the slice operation is a non-constant value of the same type as the operand.
  3025  For untyped string operands the result is a non-constant value of type <code>string</code>.
  3026  If the sliced operand is an array, it must be <a href="#Address_operators">addressable</a>
  3027  and the result of the slice operation is a slice with the same element type as the array.
  3028  </p>
  3029  
  3030  <p>
  3031  If the sliced operand of a valid slice expression is a <code>nil</code> slice, the result
  3032  is a <code>nil</code> slice. Otherwise, the result shares its underlying array with the
  3033  operand.
  3034  </p>
  3035  
  3036  <h4>Full slice expressions</h4>
  3037  
  3038  <p>
  3039  For an array, pointer to array, or slice <code>a</code> (but not a string), the primary expression
  3040  </p>
  3041  
  3042  <pre>
  3043  a[low : high : max]
  3044  </pre>
  3045  
  3046  <p>
  3047  constructs a slice of the same type, and with the same length and elements as the simple slice
  3048  expression <code>a[low : high]</code>. Additionally, it controls the resulting slice's capacity
  3049  by setting it to <code>max - low</code>. Only the first index may be omitted; it defaults to 0.
  3050  After slicing the array <code>a</code>
  3051  </p>
  3052  
  3053  <pre>
  3054  a := [5]int{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
  3055  t := a[1:3:5]
  3056  </pre>
  3057  
  3058  <p>
  3059  the slice <code>t</code> has type <code>[]int</code>, length 2, capacity 4, and elements
  3060  </p>
  3061  
  3062  <pre>
  3063  t[0] == 2
  3064  t[1] == 3
  3065  </pre>
  3066  
  3067  <p>
  3068  As for simple slice expressions, if <code>a</code> is a pointer to an array,
  3069  <code>a[low : high : max]</code> is shorthand for <code>(*a)[low : high : max]</code>.
  3070  If the sliced operand is an array, it must be <a href="#Address_operators">addressable</a>.
  3071  </p>
  3072  
  3073  <p>
  3074  The indices are <i>in range</i> if <code>0 &lt;= low &lt;= high &lt;= max &lt;= cap(a)</code>,
  3075  otherwise they are <i>out of range</i>.
  3076  A <a href="#Constants">constant</a> index must be non-negative and representable by a value of type
  3077  <code>int</code>; for arrays, constant indices must also be in range.
  3078  If multiple indices are constant, the constants that are present must be in range relative to each
  3079  other.
  3080  If the indices are out of range at run time, a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> occurs.
  3081  </p>
  3082  
  3083  <h3 id="Type_assertions">Type assertions</h3>
  3084  
  3085  <p>
  3086  For an expression <code>x</code> of <a href="#Interface_types">interface type</a>
  3087  and a type <code>T</code>, the primary expression
  3088  </p>
  3089  
  3090  <pre>
  3091  x.(T)
  3092  </pre>
  3093  
  3094  <p>
  3095  asserts that <code>x</code> is not <code>nil</code>
  3096  and that the value stored in <code>x</code> is of type <code>T</code>.
  3097  The notation <code>x.(T)</code> is called a <i>type assertion</i>.
  3098  </p>
  3099  <p>
  3100  More precisely, if <code>T</code> is not an interface type, <code>x.(T)</code> asserts
  3101  that the dynamic type of <code>x</code> is <a href="#Type_identity">identical</a>
  3102  to the type <code>T</code>.
  3103  In this case, <code>T</code> must <a href="#Method_sets">implement</a> the (interface) type of <code>x</code>;
  3104  otherwise the type assertion is invalid since it is not possible for <code>x</code>
  3105  to store a value of type <code>T</code>.
  3106  If <code>T</code> is an interface type, <code>x.(T)</code> asserts that the dynamic type
  3107  of <code>x</code> implements the interface <code>T</code>.
  3108  </p>
  3109  <p>
  3110  If the type assertion holds, the value of the expression is the value
  3111  stored in <code>x</code> and its type is <code>T</code>. If the type assertion is false,
  3112  a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> occurs.
  3113  In other words, even though the dynamic type of <code>x</code>
  3114  is known only at run time, the type of <code>x.(T)</code> is
  3115  known to be <code>T</code> in a correct program.
  3116  </p>
  3117  
  3118  <pre>
  3119  var x interface{} = 7  // x has dynamic type int and value 7
  3120  i := x.(int)           // i has type int and value 7
  3121  
  3122  type I interface { m() }
  3123  var y I
  3124  s := y.(string)        // illegal: string does not implement I (missing method m)
  3125  r := y.(io.Reader)     // r has type io.Reader and y must implement both I and io.Reader
  3126  </pre>
  3127  
  3128  <p>
  3129  A type assertion used in an <a href="#Assignments">assignment</a> or initialization of the special form
  3130  </p>
  3131  
  3132  <pre>
  3133  v, ok = x.(T)
  3134  v, ok := x.(T)
  3135  var v, ok = x.(T)
  3136  </pre>
  3137  
  3138  <p>
  3139  yields an additional untyped boolean value. The value of <code>ok</code> is <code>true</code>
  3140  if the assertion holds. Otherwise it is <code>false</code> and the value of <code>v</code> is
  3141  the <a href="#The_zero_value">zero value</a> for type <code>T</code>.
  3142  No run-time panic occurs in this case.
  3143  </p>
  3144  
  3145  
  3146  <h3 id="Calls">Calls</h3>
  3147  
  3148  <p>
  3149  Given an expression <code>f</code> of function type
  3150  <code>F</code>,
  3151  </p>
  3152  
  3153  <pre>
  3154  f(a1, a2, … an)
  3155  </pre>
  3156  
  3157  <p>
  3158  calls <code>f</code> with arguments <code>a1, a2, … an</code>.
  3159  Except for one special case, arguments must be single-valued expressions
  3160  <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a> to the parameter types of
  3161  <code>F</code> and are evaluated before the function is called.
  3162  The type of the expression is the result type
  3163  of <code>F</code>.
  3164  A method invocation is similar but the method itself
  3165  is specified as a selector upon a value of the receiver type for
  3166  the method.
  3167  </p>
  3168  
  3169  <pre>
  3170  math.Atan2(x, y)  // function call
  3171  var pt *Point
  3172  pt.Scale(3.5)     // method call with receiver pt
  3173  </pre>
  3174  
  3175  <p>
  3176  In a function call, the function value and arguments are evaluated in
  3177  <a href="#Order_of_evaluation">the usual order</a>.
  3178  After they are evaluated, the parameters of the call are passed by value to the function
  3179  and the called function begins execution.
  3180  The return parameters of the function are passed by value
  3181  back to the calling function when the function returns.
  3182  </p>
  3183  
  3184  <p>
  3185  Calling a <code>nil</code> function value
  3186  causes a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  3187  </p>
  3188  
  3189  <p>
  3190  As a special case, if the return values of a function or method
  3191  <code>g</code> are equal in number and individually
  3192  assignable to the parameters of another function or method
  3193  <code>f</code>, then the call <code>f(g(<i>parameters_of_g</i>))</code>
  3194  will invoke <code>f</code> after binding the return values of
  3195  <code>g</code> to the parameters of <code>f</code> in order.  The call
  3196  of <code>f</code> must contain no parameters other than the call of <code>g</code>,
  3197  and <code>g</code> must have at least one return value.
  3198  If <code>f</code> has a final <code>...</code> parameter, it is
  3199  assigned the return values of <code>g</code> that remain after
  3200  assignment of regular parameters.
  3201  </p>
  3202  
  3203  <pre>
  3204  func Split(s string, pos int) (string, string) {
  3205  	return s[0:pos], s[pos:]
  3206  }
  3207  
  3208  func Join(s, t string) string {
  3209  	return s + t
  3210  }
  3211  
  3212  if Join(Split(value, len(value)/2)) != value {
  3213  	log.Panic("test fails")
  3214  }
  3215  </pre>
  3216  
  3217  <p>
  3218  A method call <code>x.m()</code> is valid if the <a href="#Method_sets">method set</a>
  3219  of (the type of) <code>x</code> contains <code>m</code> and the
  3220  argument list can be assigned to the parameter list of <code>m</code>.
  3221  If <code>x</code> is <a href="#Address_operators">addressable</a> and <code>&amp;x</code>'s method
  3222  set contains <code>m</code>, <code>x.m()</code> is shorthand
  3223  for <code>(&amp;x).m()</code>:
  3224  </p>
  3225  
  3226  <pre>
  3227  var p Point
  3228  p.Scale(3.5)
  3229  </pre>
  3230  
  3231  <p>
  3232  There is no distinct method type and there are no method literals.
  3233  </p>
  3234  
  3235  <h3 id="Passing_arguments_to_..._parameters">Passing arguments to <code>...</code> parameters</h3>
  3236  
  3237  <p>
  3238  If <code>f</code> is <a href="#Function_types">variadic</a> with a final
  3239  parameter <code>p</code> of type <code>...T</code>, then within <code>f</code>
  3240  the type of <code>p</code> is equivalent to type <code>[]T</code>.
  3241  If <code>f</code> is invoked with no actual arguments for <code>p</code>,
  3242  the value passed to <code>p</code> is <code>nil</code>.
  3243  Otherwise, the value passed is a new slice
  3244  of type <code>[]T</code> with a new underlying array whose successive elements
  3245  are the actual arguments, which all must be <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  3246  to <code>T</code>. The length and capacity of the slice is therefore
  3247  the number of arguments bound to <code>p</code> and may differ for each
  3248  call site.
  3249  </p>
  3250  
  3251  <p>
  3252  Given the function and calls
  3253  </p>
  3254  <pre>
  3255  func Greeting(prefix string, who ...string)
  3256  Greeting("nobody")
  3257  Greeting("hello:", "Joe", "Anna", "Eileen")
  3258  </pre>
  3259  
  3260  <p>
  3261  within <code>Greeting</code>, <code>who</code> will have the value
  3262  <code>nil</code> in the first call, and
  3263  <code>[]string{"Joe", "Anna", "Eileen"}</code> in the second.
  3264  </p>
  3265  
  3266  <p>
  3267  If the final argument is assignable to a slice type <code>[]T</code>, it may be
  3268  passed unchanged as the value for a <code>...T</code> parameter if the argument
  3269  is followed by <code>...</code>. In this case no new slice is created.
  3270  </p>
  3271  
  3272  <p>
  3273  Given the slice <code>s</code> and call
  3274  </p>
  3275  
  3276  <pre>
  3277  s := []string{"James", "Jasmine"}
  3278  Greeting("goodbye:", s...)
  3279  </pre>
  3280  
  3281  <p>
  3282  within <code>Greeting</code>, <code>who</code> will have the same value as <code>s</code>
  3283  with the same underlying array.
  3284  </p>
  3285  
  3286  
  3287  <h3 id="Operators">Operators</h3>
  3288  
  3289  <p>
  3290  Operators combine operands into expressions.
  3291  </p>
  3292  
  3293  <pre class="ebnf">
  3294  Expression = UnaryExpr | Expression binary_op Expression .
  3295  UnaryExpr  = PrimaryExpr | unary_op UnaryExpr .
  3296  
  3297  binary_op  = "||" | "&amp;&amp;" | rel_op | add_op | mul_op .
  3298  rel_op     = "==" | "!=" | "&lt;" | "&lt;=" | ">" | ">=" .
  3299  add_op     = "+" | "-" | "|" | "^" .
  3300  mul_op     = "*" | "/" | "%" | "&lt;&lt;" | "&gt;&gt;" | "&amp;" | "&amp;^" .
  3301  
  3302  unary_op   = "+" | "-" | "!" | "^" | "*" | "&amp;" | "&lt;-" .
  3303  </pre>
  3304  
  3305  <p>
  3306  Comparisons are discussed <a href="#Comparison_operators">elsewhere</a>.
  3307  For other binary operators, the operand types must be <a href="#Type_identity">identical</a>
  3308  unless the operation involves shifts or untyped <a href="#Constants">constants</a>.
  3309  For operations involving constants only, see the section on
  3310  <a href="#Constant_expressions">constant expressions</a>.
  3311  </p>
  3312  
  3313  <p>
  3314  Except for shift operations, if one operand is an untyped <a href="#Constants">constant</a>
  3315  and the other operand is not, the constant is <a href="#Conversions">converted</a>
  3316  to the type of the other operand.
  3317  </p>
  3318  
  3319  <p>
  3320  The right operand in a shift expression must have unsigned integer type
  3321  or be an untyped constant that can be converted to unsigned integer type.
  3322  If the left operand of a non-constant shift expression is an untyped constant,
  3323  it is first converted to the type it would assume if the shift expression were
  3324  replaced by its left operand alone.
  3325  </p>
  3326  
  3327  <pre>
  3328  var s uint = 33
  3329  var i = 1&lt;&lt;s           // 1 has type int
  3330  var j int32 = 1&lt;&lt;s     // 1 has type int32; j == 0
  3331  var k = uint64(1&lt;&lt;s)   // 1 has type uint64; k == 1&lt;&lt;33
  3332  var m int = 1.0&lt;&lt;s     // 1.0 has type int
  3333  var n = 1.0&lt;&lt;s != i    // 1.0 has type int; n == false if ints are 32bits in size
  3334  var o = 1&lt;&lt;s == 2&lt;&lt;s   // 1 and 2 have type int; o == true if ints are 32bits in size
  3335  var p = 1&lt;&lt;s == 1&lt;&lt;33  // illegal if ints are 32bits in size: 1 has type int, but 1&lt;&lt;33 overflows int
  3336  var u = 1.0&lt;&lt;s         // illegal: 1.0 has type float64, cannot shift
  3337  var u1 = 1.0&lt;&lt;s != 0   // illegal: 1.0 has type float64, cannot shift
  3338  var u2 = 1&lt;&lt;s != 1.0   // illegal: 1 has type float64, cannot shift
  3339  var v float32 = 1&lt;&lt;s   // illegal: 1 has type float32, cannot shift
  3340  var w int64 = 1.0&lt;&lt;33  // 1.0&lt;&lt;33 is a constant shift expression
  3341  </pre>
  3342  
  3343  
  3344  <h4 id="Operator_precedence">Operator precedence</h4>
  3345  <p>
  3346  Unary operators have the highest precedence.
  3347  As the  <code>++</code> and <code>--</code> operators form
  3348  statements, not expressions, they fall
  3349  outside the operator hierarchy.
  3350  As a consequence, statement <code>*p++</code> is the same as <code>(*p)++</code>.
  3351  <p>
  3352  There are five precedence levels for binary operators.
  3353  Multiplication operators bind strongest, followed by addition
  3354  operators, comparison operators, <code>&amp;&amp;</code> (logical AND),
  3355  and finally <code>||</code> (logical OR):
  3356  </p>
  3357  
  3358  <pre class="grammar">
  3359  Precedence    Operator
  3360      5             *  /  %  &lt;&lt;  &gt;&gt;  &amp;  &amp;^
  3361      4             +  -  |  ^
  3362      3             ==  !=  &lt;  &lt;=  &gt;  &gt;=
  3363      2             &amp;&amp;
  3364      1             ||
  3365  </pre>
  3366  
  3367  <p>
  3368  Binary operators of the same precedence associate from left to right.
  3369  For instance, <code>x / y * z</code> is the same as <code>(x / y) * z</code>.
  3370  </p>
  3371  
  3372  <pre>
  3373  +x
  3374  23 + 3*x[i]
  3375  x &lt;= f()
  3376  ^a &gt;&gt; b
  3377  f() || g()
  3378  x == y+1 &amp;&amp; &lt;-chanPtr &gt; 0
  3379  </pre>
  3380  
  3381  
  3382  <h3 id="Arithmetic_operators">Arithmetic operators</h3>
  3383  <p>
  3384  Arithmetic operators apply to numeric values and yield a result of the same
  3385  type as the first operand. The four standard arithmetic operators (<code>+</code>,
  3386  <code>-</code>, <code>*</code>, <code>/</code>) apply to integer,
  3387  floating-point, and complex types; <code>+</code> also applies to strings.
  3388  The bitwise logical and shift operators apply to integers only.
  3389  </p>
  3390  
  3391  <pre class="grammar">
  3392  +    sum                    integers, floats, complex values, strings
  3393  -    difference             integers, floats, complex values
  3394  *    product                integers, floats, complex values
  3395  /    quotient               integers, floats, complex values
  3396  %    remainder              integers
  3397  
  3398  &amp;    bitwise AND            integers
  3399  |    bitwise OR             integers
  3400  ^    bitwise XOR            integers
  3401  &amp;^   bit clear (AND NOT)    integers
  3402  
  3403  &lt;&lt;   left shift             integer &lt;&lt; unsigned integer
  3404  &gt;&gt;   right shift            integer &gt;&gt; unsigned integer
  3405  </pre>
  3406  
  3407  
  3408  <h4 id="Integer_operators">Integer operators</h4>
  3409  
  3410  <p>
  3411  For two integer values <code>x</code> and <code>y</code>, the integer quotient
  3412  <code>q = x / y</code> and remainder <code>r = x % y</code> satisfy the following
  3413  relationships:
  3414  </p>
  3415  
  3416  <pre>
  3417  x = q*y + r  and  |r| &lt; |y|
  3418  </pre>
  3419  
  3420  <p>
  3421  with <code>x / y</code> truncated towards zero
  3422  (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modulo_operation">"truncated division"</a>).
  3423  </p>
  3424  
  3425  <pre>
  3426   x     y     x / y     x % y
  3427   5     3       1         2
  3428  -5     3      -1        -2
  3429   5    -3      -1         2
  3430  -5    -3       1        -2
  3431  </pre>
  3432  
  3433  <p>
  3434  As an exception to this rule, if the dividend <code>x</code> is the most
  3435  negative value for the int type of <code>x</code>, the quotient
  3436  <code>q = x / -1</code> is equal to <code>x</code> (and <code>r = 0</code>).
  3437  </p>
  3438  
  3439  <pre>
  3440  			 x, q
  3441  int8                     -128
  3442  int16                  -32768
  3443  int32             -2147483648
  3444  int64    -9223372036854775808
  3445  </pre>
  3446  
  3447  <p>
  3448  If the divisor is a <a href="#Constants">constant</a>, it must not be zero.
  3449  If the divisor is zero at run time, a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> occurs.
  3450  If the dividend is non-negative and the divisor is a constant power of 2,
  3451  the division may be replaced by a right shift, and computing the remainder may
  3452  be replaced by a bitwise AND operation:
  3453  </p>
  3454  
  3455  <pre>
  3456   x     x / 4     x % 4     x &gt;&gt; 2     x &amp; 3
  3457   11      2         3         2          3
  3458  -11     -2        -3        -3          1
  3459  </pre>
  3460  
  3461  <p>
  3462  The shift operators shift the left operand by the shift count specified by the
  3463  right operand. They implement arithmetic shifts if the left operand is a signed
  3464  integer and logical shifts if it is an unsigned integer.
  3465  There is no upper limit on the shift count. Shifts behave
  3466  as if the left operand is shifted <code>n</code> times by 1 for a shift
  3467  count of <code>n</code>.
  3468  As a result, <code>x &lt;&lt; 1</code> is the same as <code>x*2</code>
  3469  and <code>x &gt;&gt; 1</code> is the same as
  3470  <code>x/2</code> but truncated towards negative infinity.
  3471  </p>
  3472  
  3473  <p>
  3474  For integer operands, the unary operators
  3475  <code>+</code>, <code>-</code>, and <code>^</code> are defined as
  3476  follows:
  3477  </p>
  3478  
  3479  <pre class="grammar">
  3480  +x                          is 0 + x
  3481  -x    negation              is 0 - x
  3482  ^x    bitwise complement    is m ^ x  with m = "all bits set to 1" for unsigned x
  3483                                        and  m = -1 for signed x
  3484  </pre>
  3485  
  3486  
  3487  <h4 id="Integer_overflow">Integer overflow</h4>
  3488  
  3489  <p>
  3490  For unsigned integer values, the operations <code>+</code>,
  3491  <code>-</code>, <code>*</code>, and <code>&lt;&lt;</code> are
  3492  computed modulo 2<sup><i>n</i></sup>, where <i>n</i> is the bit width of
  3493  the <a href="#Numeric_types">unsigned integer</a>'s type.
  3494  Loosely speaking, these unsigned integer operations
  3495  discard high bits upon overflow, and programs may rely on ``wrap around''.
  3496  </p>
  3497  <p>
  3498  For signed integers, the operations <code>+</code>,
  3499  <code>-</code>, <code>*</code>, and <code>&lt;&lt;</code> may legally
  3500  overflow and the resulting value exists and is deterministically defined
  3501  by the signed integer representation, the operation, and its operands.
  3502  No exception is raised as a result of overflow. A
  3503  compiler may not optimize code under the assumption that overflow does
  3504  not occur. For instance, it may not assume that <code>x &lt; x + 1</code> is always true.
  3505  </p>
  3506  
  3507  
  3508  <h4 id="Floating_point_operators">Floating-point operators</h4>
  3509  
  3510  <p>
  3511  For floating-point and complex numbers,
  3512  <code>+x</code> is the same as <code>x</code>,
  3513  while <code>-x</code> is the negation of <code>x</code>.
  3514  The result of a floating-point or complex division by zero is not specified beyond the
  3515  IEEE-754 standard; whether a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>
  3516  occurs is implementation-specific.
  3517  </p>
  3518  
  3519  
  3520  <h4 id="String_concatenation">String concatenation</h4>
  3521  
  3522  <p>
  3523  Strings can be concatenated using the <code>+</code> operator
  3524  or the <code>+=</code> assignment operator:
  3525  </p>
  3526  
  3527  <pre>
  3528  s := "hi" + string(c)
  3529  s += " and good bye"
  3530  </pre>
  3531  
  3532  <p>
  3533  String addition creates a new string by concatenating the operands.
  3534  </p>
  3535  
  3536  
  3537  <h3 id="Comparison_operators">Comparison operators</h3>
  3538  
  3539  <p>
  3540  Comparison operators compare two operands and yield an untyped boolean value.
  3541  </p>
  3542  
  3543  <pre class="grammar">
  3544  ==    equal
  3545  !=    not equal
  3546  &lt;     less
  3547  &lt;=    less or equal
  3548  &gt;     greater
  3549  &gt;=    greater or equal
  3550  </pre>
  3551  
  3552  <p>
  3553  In any comparison, the first operand
  3554  must be <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  3555  to the type of the second operand, or vice versa.
  3556  </p>
  3557  <p>
  3558  The equality operators <code>==</code> and <code>!=</code> apply
  3559  to operands that are <i>comparable</i>.
  3560  The ordering operators <code>&lt;</code>, <code>&lt;=</code>, <code>&gt;</code>, and <code>&gt;=</code>
  3561  apply to operands that are <i>ordered</i>.
  3562  These terms and the result of the comparisons are defined as follows:
  3563  </p>
  3564  
  3565  <ul>
  3566  	<li>
  3567  	Boolean values are comparable.
  3568  	Two boolean values are equal if they are either both
  3569  	<code>true</code> or both <code>false</code>.
  3570  	</li>
  3571  
  3572  	<li>
  3573  	Integer values are comparable and ordered, in the usual way.
  3574  	</li>
  3575  
  3576  	<li>
  3577  	Floating point values are comparable and ordered,
  3578  	as defined by the IEEE-754 standard.
  3579  	</li>
  3580  
  3581  	<li>
  3582  	Complex values are comparable.
  3583  	Two complex values <code>u</code> and <code>v</code> are
  3584  	equal if both <code>real(u) == real(v)</code> and
  3585  	<code>imag(u) == imag(v)</code>.
  3586  	</li>
  3587  
  3588  	<li>
  3589  	String values are comparable and ordered, lexically byte-wise.
  3590  	</li>
  3591  
  3592  	<li>
  3593  	Pointer values are comparable.
  3594  	Two pointer values are equal if they point to the same variable or if both have value <code>nil</code>.
  3595  	Pointers to distinct <a href="#Size_and_alignment_guarantees">zero-size</a> variables may or may not be equal.
  3596  	</li>
  3597  
  3598  	<li>
  3599  	Channel values are comparable.
  3600  	Two channel values are equal if they were created by the same call to
  3601  	<a href="#Making_slices_maps_and_channels"><code>make</code></a>
  3602  	or if both have value <code>nil</code>.
  3603  	</li>
  3604  
  3605  	<li>
  3606  	Interface values are comparable.
  3607  	Two interface values are equal if they have <a href="#Type_identity">identical</a> dynamic types
  3608  	and equal dynamic values or if both have value <code>nil</code>.
  3609  	</li>
  3610  
  3611  	<li>
  3612  	A value <code>x</code> of non-interface type <code>X</code> and
  3613  	a value <code>t</code> of interface type <code>T</code> are comparable when values
  3614  	of type <code>X</code> are comparable and
  3615  	<code>X</code> implements <code>T</code>.
  3616  	They are equal if <code>t</code>'s dynamic type is identical to <code>X</code>
  3617  	and <code>t</code>'s dynamic value is equal to <code>x</code>.
  3618  	</li>
  3619  
  3620  	<li>
  3621  	Struct values are comparable if all their fields are comparable.
  3622  	Two struct values are equal if their corresponding
  3623  	non-<a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a> fields are equal.
  3624  	</li>
  3625  
  3626  	<li>
  3627  	Array values are comparable if values of the array element type are comparable.
  3628  	Two array values are equal if their corresponding elements are equal.
  3629  	</li>
  3630  </ul>
  3631  
  3632  <p>
  3633  A comparison of two interface values with identical dynamic types
  3634  causes a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> if values
  3635  of that type are not comparable.  This behavior applies not only to direct interface
  3636  value comparisons but also when comparing arrays of interface values
  3637  or structs with interface-valued fields.
  3638  </p>
  3639  
  3640  <p>
  3641  Slice, map, and function values are not comparable.
  3642  However, as a special case, a slice, map, or function value may
  3643  be compared to the predeclared identifier <code>nil</code>.
  3644  Comparison of pointer, channel, and interface values to <code>nil</code>
  3645  is also allowed and follows from the general rules above.
  3646  </p>
  3647  
  3648  <pre>
  3649  const c = 3 &lt; 4            // c is the untyped bool constant true
  3650  
  3651  type MyBool bool
  3652  var x, y int
  3653  var (
  3654  	// The result of a comparison is an untyped bool.
  3655  	// The usual assignment rules apply.
  3656  	b3        = x == y // b3 has type bool
  3657  	b4 bool   = x == y // b4 has type bool
  3658  	b5 MyBool = x == y // b5 has type MyBool
  3659  )
  3660  </pre>
  3661  
  3662  <h3 id="Logical_operators">Logical operators</h3>
  3663  
  3664  <p>
  3665  Logical operators apply to <a href="#Boolean_types">boolean</a> values
  3666  and yield a result of the same type as the operands.
  3667  The right operand is evaluated conditionally.
  3668  </p>
  3669  
  3670  <pre class="grammar">
  3671  &amp;&amp;    conditional AND    p &amp;&amp; q  is  "if p then q else false"
  3672  ||    conditional OR     p || q  is  "if p then true else q"
  3673  !     NOT                !p      is  "not p"
  3674  </pre>
  3675  
  3676  
  3677  <h3 id="Address_operators">Address operators</h3>
  3678  
  3679  <p>
  3680  For an operand <code>x</code> of type <code>T</code>, the address operation
  3681  <code>&amp;x</code> generates a pointer of type <code>*T</code> to <code>x</code>.
  3682  The operand must be <i>addressable</i>,
  3683  that is, either a variable, pointer indirection, or slice indexing
  3684  operation; or a field selector of an addressable struct operand;
  3685  or an array indexing operation of an addressable array.
  3686  As an exception to the addressability requirement, <code>x</code> may also be a
  3687  (possibly parenthesized)
  3688  <a href="#Composite_literals">composite literal</a>.
  3689  If the evaluation of <code>x</code> would cause a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>,
  3690  then the evaluation of <code>&amp;x</code> does too.
  3691  </p>
  3692  
  3693  <p>
  3694  For an operand <code>x</code> of pointer type <code>*T</code>, the pointer
  3695  indirection <code>*x</code> denotes the <a href="#Variables">variable</a> of type <code>T</code> pointed
  3696  to by <code>x</code>.
  3697  If <code>x</code> is <code>nil</code>, an attempt to evaluate <code>*x</code>
  3698  will cause a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  3699  </p>
  3700  
  3701  <pre>
  3702  &amp;x
  3703  &amp;a[f(2)]
  3704  &amp;Point{2, 3}
  3705  *p
  3706  *pf(x)
  3707  
  3708  var x *int = nil
  3709  *x   // causes a run-time panic
  3710  &amp;*x  // causes a run-time panic
  3711  </pre>
  3712  
  3713  
  3714  <h3 id="Receive_operator">Receive operator</h3>
  3715  
  3716  <p>
  3717  For an operand <code>ch</code> of <a href="#Channel_types">channel type</a>,
  3718  the value of the receive operation <code>&lt;-ch</code> is the value received
  3719  from the channel <code>ch</code>. The channel direction must permit receive operations,
  3720  and the type of the receive operation is the element type of the channel.
  3721  The expression blocks until a value is available.
  3722  Receiving from a <code>nil</code> channel blocks forever.
  3723  A receive operation on a <a href="#Close">closed</a> channel can always proceed
  3724  immediately, yielding the element type's <a href="#The_zero_value">zero value</a>
  3725  after any previously sent values have been received.
  3726  </p>
  3727  
  3728  <pre>
  3729  v1 := &lt;-ch
  3730  v2 = &lt;-ch
  3731  f(&lt;-ch)
  3732  &lt;-strobe  // wait until clock pulse and discard received value
  3733  </pre>
  3734  
  3735  <p>
  3736  A receive expression used in an <a href="#Assignments">assignment</a> or initialization of the special form
  3737  </p>
  3738  
  3739  <pre>
  3740  x, ok = &lt;-ch
  3741  x, ok := &lt;-ch
  3742  var x, ok = &lt;-ch
  3743  </pre>
  3744  
  3745  <p>
  3746  yields an additional untyped boolean result reporting whether the
  3747  communication succeeded. The value of <code>ok</code> is <code>true</code>
  3748  if the value received was delivered by a successful send operation to the
  3749  channel, or <code>false</code> if it is a zero value generated because the
  3750  channel is closed and empty.
  3751  </p>
  3752  
  3753  
  3754  <h3 id="Conversions">Conversions</h3>
  3755  
  3756  <p>
  3757  Conversions are expressions of the form <code>T(x)</code>
  3758  where <code>T</code> is a type and <code>x</code> is an expression
  3759  that can be converted to type <code>T</code>.
  3760  </p>
  3761  
  3762  <pre class="ebnf">
  3763  Conversion = Type "(" Expression [ "," ] ")" .
  3764  </pre>
  3765  
  3766  <p>
  3767  If the type starts with the operator <code>*</code> or <code>&lt;-</code>,
  3768  or if the type starts with the keyword <code>func</code>
  3769  and has no result list, it must be parenthesized when
  3770  necessary to avoid ambiguity:
  3771  </p>
  3772  
  3773  <pre>
  3774  *Point(p)        // same as *(Point(p))
  3775  (*Point)(p)      // p is converted to *Point
  3776  &lt;-chan int(c)    // same as &lt;-(chan int(c))
  3777  (&lt;-chan int)(c)  // c is converted to &lt;-chan int
  3778  func()(x)        // function signature func() x
  3779  (func())(x)      // x is converted to func()
  3780  (func() int)(x)  // x is converted to func() int
  3781  func() int(x)    // x is converted to func() int (unambiguous)
  3782  </pre>
  3783  
  3784  <p>
  3785  A <a href="#Constants">constant</a> value <code>x</code> can be converted to
  3786  type <code>T</code> in any of these cases:
  3787  </p>
  3788  
  3789  <ul>
  3790  	<li>
  3791  	<code>x</code> is representable by a value of type <code>T</code>.
  3792  	</li>
  3793  	<li>
  3794  	<code>x</code> is a floating-point constant,
  3795  	<code>T</code> is a floating-point type,
  3796  	and <code>x</code> is representable by a value
  3797  	of type <code>T</code> after rounding using
  3798  	IEEE 754 round-to-even rules.
  3799  	The constant <code>T(x)</code> is the rounded value.
  3800  	</li>
  3801  	<li>
  3802  	<code>x</code> is an integer constant and <code>T</code> is a
  3803  	<a href="#String_types">string type</a>.
  3804  	The <a href="#Conversions_to_and_from_a_string_type">same rule</a>
  3805  	as for non-constant <code>x</code> applies in this case.
  3806  	</li>
  3807  </ul>
  3808  
  3809  <p>
  3810  Converting a constant yields a typed constant as result.
  3811  </p>
  3812  
  3813  <pre>
  3814  uint(iota)               // iota value of type uint
  3815  float32(2.718281828)     // 2.718281828 of type float32
  3816  complex128(1)            // 1.0 + 0.0i of type complex128
  3817  float32(0.49999999)      // 0.5 of type float32
  3818  string('x')              // "x" of type string
  3819  string(0x266c)           // "♬" of type string
  3820  MyString("foo" + "bar")  // "foobar" of type MyString
  3821  string([]byte{'a'})      // not a constant: []byte{'a'} is not a constant
  3822  (*int)(nil)              // not a constant: nil is not a constant, *int is not a boolean, numeric, or string type
  3823  int(1.2)                 // illegal: 1.2 cannot be represented as an int
  3824  string(65.0)             // illegal: 65.0 is not an integer constant
  3825  </pre>
  3826  
  3827  <p>
  3828  A non-constant value <code>x</code> can be converted to type <code>T</code>
  3829  in any of these cases:
  3830  </p>
  3831  
  3832  <ul>
  3833  	<li>
  3834  	<code>x</code> is <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  3835  	to <code>T</code>.
  3836  	</li>
  3837  	<li>
  3838  	<code>x</code>'s type and <code>T</code> have identical
  3839  	<a href="#Types">underlying types</a>.
  3840  	</li>
  3841  	<li>
  3842  	<code>x</code>'s type and <code>T</code> are unnamed pointer types
  3843  	and their pointer base types have identical underlying types.
  3844  	</li>
  3845  	<li>
  3846  	<code>x</code>'s type and <code>T</code> are both integer or floating
  3847  	point types.
  3848  	</li>
  3849  	<li>
  3850  	<code>x</code>'s type and <code>T</code> are both complex types.
  3851  	</li>
  3852  	<li>
  3853  	<code>x</code> is an integer or a slice of bytes or runes
  3854  	and <code>T</code> is a string type.
  3855  	</li>
  3856  	<li>
  3857  	<code>x</code> is a string and <code>T</code> is a slice of bytes or runes.
  3858  	</li>
  3859  </ul>
  3860  
  3861  <p>
  3862  Specific rules apply to (non-constant) conversions between numeric types or
  3863  to and from a string type.
  3864  These conversions may change the representation of <code>x</code>
  3865  and incur a run-time cost.
  3866  All other conversions only change the type but not the representation
  3867  of <code>x</code>.
  3868  </p>
  3869  
  3870  <p>
  3871  There is no linguistic mechanism to convert between pointers and integers.
  3872  The package <a href="#Package_unsafe"><code>unsafe</code></a>
  3873  implements this functionality under
  3874  restricted circumstances.
  3875  </p>
  3876  
  3877  <h4>Conversions between numeric types</h4>
  3878  
  3879  <p>
  3880  For the conversion of non-constant numeric values, the following rules apply:
  3881  </p>
  3882  
  3883  <ol>
  3884  <li>
  3885  When converting between integer types, if the value is a signed integer, it is
  3886  sign extended to implicit infinite precision; otherwise it is zero extended.
  3887  It is then truncated to fit in the result type's size.
  3888  For example, if <code>v := uint16(0x10F0)</code>, then <code>uint32(int8(v)) == 0xFFFFFFF0</code>.
  3889  The conversion always yields a valid value; there is no indication of overflow.
  3890  </li>
  3891  <li>
  3892  When converting a floating-point number to an integer, the fraction is discarded
  3893  (truncation towards zero).
  3894  </li>
  3895  <li>
  3896  When converting an integer or floating-point number to a floating-point type,
  3897  or a complex number to another complex type, the result value is rounded
  3898  to the precision specified by the destination type.
  3899  For instance, the value of a variable <code>x</code> of type <code>float32</code>
  3900  may be stored using additional precision beyond that of an IEEE-754 32-bit number,
  3901  but float32(x) represents the result of rounding <code>x</code>'s value to
  3902  32-bit precision. Similarly, <code>x + 0.1</code> may use more than 32 bits
  3903  of precision, but <code>float32(x + 0.1)</code> does not.
  3904  </li>
  3905  </ol>
  3906  
  3907  <p>
  3908  In all non-constant conversions involving floating-point or complex values,
  3909  if the result type cannot represent the value the conversion
  3910  succeeds but the result value is implementation-dependent.
  3911  </p>
  3912  
  3913  <h4 id="Conversions_to_and_from_a_string_type">Conversions to and from a string type</h4>
  3914  
  3915  <ol>
  3916  <li>
  3917  Converting a signed or unsigned integer value to a string type yields a
  3918  string containing the UTF-8 representation of the integer. Values outside
  3919  the range of valid Unicode code points are converted to <code>"\uFFFD"</code>.
  3920  
  3921  <pre>
  3922  string('a')       // "a"
  3923  string(-1)        // "\ufffd" == "\xef\xbf\xbd"
  3924  string(0xf8)      // "\u00f8" == "ø" == "\xc3\xb8"
  3925  type MyString string
  3926  MyString(0x65e5)  // "\u65e5" == "日" == "\xe6\x97\xa5"
  3927  </pre>
  3928  </li>
  3929  
  3930  <li>
  3931  Converting a slice of bytes to a string type yields
  3932  a string whose successive bytes are the elements of the slice.
  3933  
  3934  <pre>
  3935  string([]byte{'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', '\xc3', '\xb8'})   // "hellø"
  3936  string([]byte{})                                     // ""
  3937  string([]byte(nil))                                  // ""
  3938  
  3939  type MyBytes []byte
  3940  string(MyBytes{'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', '\xc3', '\xb8'})  // "hellø"
  3941  </pre>
  3942  </li>
  3943  
  3944  <li>
  3945  Converting a slice of runes to a string type yields
  3946  a string that is the concatenation of the individual rune values
  3947  converted to strings.
  3948  
  3949  <pre>
  3950  string([]rune{0x767d, 0x9d6c, 0x7fd4})   // "\u767d\u9d6c\u7fd4" == "白鵬翔"
  3951  string([]rune{})                         // ""
  3952  string([]rune(nil))                      // ""
  3953  
  3954  type MyRunes []rune
  3955  string(MyRunes{0x767d, 0x9d6c, 0x7fd4})  // "\u767d\u9d6c\u7fd4" == "白鵬翔"
  3956  </pre>
  3957  </li>
  3958  
  3959  <li>
  3960  Converting a value of a string type to a slice of bytes type
  3961  yields a slice whose successive elements are the bytes of the string.
  3962  
  3963  <pre>
  3964  []byte("hellø")   // []byte{'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', '\xc3', '\xb8'}
  3965  []byte("")        // []byte{}
  3966  
  3967  MyBytes("hellø")  // []byte{'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', '\xc3', '\xb8'}
  3968  </pre>
  3969  </li>
  3970  
  3971  <li>
  3972  Converting a value of a string type to a slice of runes type
  3973  yields a slice containing the individual Unicode code points of the string.
  3974  
  3975  <pre>
  3976  []rune(MyString("白鵬翔"))  // []rune{0x767d, 0x9d6c, 0x7fd4}
  3977  []rune("")                 // []rune{}
  3978  
  3979  MyRunes("白鵬翔")           // []rune{0x767d, 0x9d6c, 0x7fd4}
  3980  </pre>
  3981  </li>
  3982  </ol>
  3983  
  3984  
  3985  <h3 id="Constant_expressions">Constant expressions</h3>
  3986  
  3987  <p>
  3988  Constant expressions may contain only <a href="#Constants">constant</a>
  3989  operands and are evaluated at compile time.
  3990  </p>
  3991  
  3992  <p>
  3993  Untyped boolean, numeric, and string constants may be used as operands
  3994  wherever it is legal to use an operand of boolean, numeric, or string type,
  3995  respectively.
  3996  Except for shift operations, if the operands of a binary operation are
  3997  different kinds of untyped constants, the operation and, for non-boolean operations, the result use
  3998  the kind that appears later in this list: integer, rune, floating-point, complex.
  3999  For example, an untyped integer constant divided by an
  4000  untyped complex constant yields an untyped complex constant.
  4001  </p>
  4002  
  4003  <p>
  4004  A constant <a href="#Comparison_operators">comparison</a> always yields
  4005  an untyped boolean constant.  If the left operand of a constant
  4006  <a href="#Operators">shift expression</a> is an untyped constant, the
  4007  result is an integer constant; otherwise it is a constant of the same
  4008  type as the left operand, which must be of
  4009  <a href="#Numeric_types">integer type</a>.
  4010  Applying all other operators to untyped constants results in an untyped
  4011  constant of the same kind (that is, a boolean, integer, floating-point,
  4012  complex, or string constant).
  4013  </p>
  4014  
  4015  <pre>
  4016  const a = 2 + 3.0          // a == 5.0   (untyped floating-point constant)
  4017  const b = 15 / 4           // b == 3     (untyped integer constant)
  4018  const c = 15 / 4.0         // c == 3.75  (untyped floating-point constant)
  4019  const Θ float64 = 3/2      // Θ == 1.0   (type float64, 3/2 is integer division)
  4020  const Π float64 = 3/2.     // Π == 1.5   (type float64, 3/2. is float division)
  4021  const d = 1 &lt;&lt; 3.0         // d == 8     (untyped integer constant)
  4022  const e = 1.0 &lt;&lt; 3         // e == 8     (untyped integer constant)
  4023  const f = int32(1) &lt;&lt; 33   // illegal    (constant 8589934592 overflows int32)
  4024  const g = float64(2) &gt;&gt; 1  // illegal    (float64(2) is a typed floating-point constant)
  4025  const h = "foo" &gt; "bar"    // h == true  (untyped boolean constant)
  4026  const j = true             // j == true  (untyped boolean constant)
  4027  const k = 'w' + 1          // k == 'x'   (untyped rune constant)
  4028  const l = "hi"             // l == "hi"  (untyped string constant)
  4029  const m = string(k)        // m == "x"   (type string)
  4030  const Σ = 1 - 0.707i       //            (untyped complex constant)
  4031  const Δ = Σ + 2.0e-4       //            (untyped complex constant)
  4032  const Φ = iota*1i - 1/1i   //            (untyped complex constant)
  4033  </pre>
  4034  
  4035  <p>
  4036  Applying the built-in function <code>complex</code> to untyped
  4037  integer, rune, or floating-point constants yields
  4038  an untyped complex constant.
  4039  </p>
  4040  
  4041  <pre>
  4042  const ic = complex(0, c)   // ic == 3.75i  (untyped complex constant)
  4043  const iΘ = complex(0, Θ)   // iΘ == 1i     (type complex128)
  4044  </pre>
  4045  
  4046  <p>
  4047  Constant expressions are always evaluated exactly; intermediate values and the
  4048  constants themselves may require precision significantly larger than supported
  4049  by any predeclared type in the language. The following are legal declarations:
  4050  </p>
  4051  
  4052  <pre>
  4053  const Huge = 1 &lt;&lt; 100         // Huge == 1267650600228229401496703205376  (untyped integer constant)
  4054  const Four int8 = Huge &gt;&gt; 98  // Four == 4                                (type int8)
  4055  </pre>
  4056  
  4057  <p>
  4058  The divisor of a constant division or remainder operation must not be zero:
  4059  </p>
  4060  
  4061  <pre>
  4062  3.14 / 0.0   // illegal: division by zero
  4063  </pre>
  4064  
  4065  <p>
  4066  The values of <i>typed</i> constants must always be accurately representable as values
  4067  of the constant type. The following constant expressions are illegal:
  4068  </p>
  4069  
  4070  <pre>
  4071  uint(-1)     // -1 cannot be represented as a uint
  4072  int(3.14)    // 3.14 cannot be represented as an int
  4073  int64(Huge)  // 1267650600228229401496703205376 cannot be represented as an int64
  4074  Four * 300   // operand 300 cannot be represented as an int8 (type of Four)
  4075  Four * 100   // product 400 cannot be represented as an int8 (type of Four)
  4076  </pre>
  4077  
  4078  <p>
  4079  The mask used by the unary bitwise complement operator <code>^</code> matches
  4080  the rule for non-constants: the mask is all 1s for unsigned constants
  4081  and -1 for signed and untyped constants.
  4082  </p>
  4083  
  4084  <pre>
  4085  ^1         // untyped integer constant, equal to -2
  4086  uint8(^1)  // illegal: same as uint8(-2), -2 cannot be represented as a uint8
  4087  ^uint8(1)  // typed uint8 constant, same as 0xFF ^ uint8(1) = uint8(0xFE)
  4088  int8(^1)   // same as int8(-2)
  4089  ^int8(1)   // same as -1 ^ int8(1) = -2
  4090  </pre>
  4091  
  4092  <p>
  4093  Implementation restriction: A compiler may use rounding while
  4094  computing untyped floating-point or complex constant expressions; see
  4095  the implementation restriction in the section
  4096  on <a href="#Constants">constants</a>.  This rounding may cause a
  4097  floating-point constant expression to be invalid in an integer
  4098  context, even if it would be integral when calculated using infinite
  4099  precision, and vice versa.
  4100  </p>
  4101  
  4102  
  4103  <h3 id="Order_of_evaluation">Order of evaluation</h3>
  4104  
  4105  <p>
  4106  At package level, <a href="#Package_initialization">initialization dependencies</a>
  4107  determine the evaluation order of individual initialization expressions in
  4108  <a href="#Variable_declarations">variable declarations</a>.
  4109  Otherwise, when evaluating the <a href="#Operands">operands</a> of an
  4110  expression, assignment, or
  4111  <a href="#Return_statements">return statement</a>,
  4112  all function calls, method calls, and
  4113  communication operations are evaluated in lexical left-to-right
  4114  order.
  4115  </p>
  4116  
  4117  <p>
  4118  For example, in the (function-local) assignment
  4119  </p>
  4120  <pre>
  4121  y[f()], ok = g(h(), i()+x[j()], &lt;-c), k()
  4122  </pre>
  4123  <p>
  4124  the function calls and communication happen in the order
  4125  <code>f()</code>, <code>h()</code>, <code>i()</code>, <code>j()</code>,
  4126  <code>&lt;-c</code>, <code>g()</code>, and <code>k()</code>.
  4127  However, the order of those events compared to the evaluation
  4128  and indexing of <code>x</code> and the evaluation
  4129  of <code>y</code> is not specified.
  4130  </p>
  4131  
  4132  <pre>
  4133  a := 1
  4134  f := func() int { a++; return a }
  4135  x := []int{a, f()}            // x may be [1, 2] or [2, 2]: evaluation order between a and f() is not specified
  4136  m := map[int]int{a: 1, a: 2}  // m may be {2: 1} or {2: 2}: evaluation order between the two map assignments is not specified
  4137  n := map[int]int{a: f()}      // n may be {2: 3} or {3: 3}: evaluation order between the key and the value is not specified
  4138  </pre>
  4139  
  4140  <p>
  4141  At package level, initialization dependencies override the left-to-right rule
  4142  for individual initialization expressions, but not for operands within each
  4143  expression:
  4144  </p>
  4145  
  4146  <pre>
  4147  var a, b, c = f() + v(), g(), sqr(u()) + v()
  4148  
  4149  func f() int        { return c }
  4150  func g() int        { return a }
  4151  func sqr(x int) int { return x*x }
  4152  
  4153  // functions u and v are independent of all other variables and functions
  4154  </pre>
  4155  
  4156  <p>
  4157  The function calls happen in the order
  4158  <code>u()</code>, <code>sqr()</code>, <code>v()</code>,
  4159  <code>f()</code>, <code>v()</code>, and <code>g()</code>.
  4160  </p>
  4161  
  4162  <p>
  4163  Floating-point operations within a single expression are evaluated according to
  4164  the associativity of the operators.  Explicit parentheses affect the evaluation
  4165  by overriding the default associativity.
  4166  In the expression <code>x + (y + z)</code> the addition <code>y + z</code>
  4167  is performed before adding <code>x</code>.
  4168  </p>
  4169  
  4170  <h2 id="Statements">Statements</h2>
  4171  
  4172  <p>
  4173  Statements control execution.
  4174  </p>
  4175  
  4176  <pre class="ebnf">
  4177  Statement =
  4178  	Declaration | LabeledStmt | SimpleStmt |
  4179  	GoStmt | ReturnStmt | BreakStmt | ContinueStmt | GotoStmt |
  4180  	FallthroughStmt | Block | IfStmt | SwitchStmt | SelectStmt | ForStmt |
  4181  	DeferStmt .
  4182  
  4183  SimpleStmt = EmptyStmt | ExpressionStmt | SendStmt | IncDecStmt | Assignment | ShortVarDecl .
  4184  </pre>
  4185  
  4186  <h3 id="Terminating_statements">Terminating statements</h3>
  4187  
  4188  <p>
  4189  A terminating statement is one of the following:
  4190  </p>
  4191  
  4192  <ol>
  4193  <li>
  4194  	A <a href="#Return_statements">"return"</a> or
  4195      	<a href="#Goto_statements">"goto"</a> statement.
  4196  	<!-- ul below only for regular layout -->
  4197  	<ul> </ul>
  4198  </li>
  4199  
  4200  <li>
  4201  	A call to the built-in function
  4202  	<a href="#Handling_panics"><code>panic</code></a>.
  4203  	<!-- ul below only for regular layout -->
  4204  	<ul> </ul>
  4205  </li>
  4206  
  4207  <li>
  4208  	A <a href="#Blocks">block</a> in which the statement list ends in a terminating statement.
  4209  	<!-- ul below only for regular layout -->
  4210  	<ul> </ul>
  4211  </li>
  4212  
  4213  <li>
  4214  	An <a href="#If_statements">"if" statement</a> in which:
  4215  	<ul>
  4216  	<li>the "else" branch is present, and</li>
  4217  	<li>both branches are terminating statements.</li>
  4218  	</ul>
  4219  </li>
  4220  
  4221  <li>
  4222  	A <a href="#For_statements">"for" statement</a> in which:
  4223  	<ul>
  4224  	<li>there are no "break" statements referring to the "for" statement, and</li>
  4225  	<li>the loop condition is absent.</li>
  4226  	</ul>
  4227  </li>
  4228  
  4229  <li>
  4230  	A <a href="#Switch_statements">"switch" statement</a> in which:
  4231  	<ul>
  4232  	<li>there are no "break" statements referring to the "switch" statement,</li>
  4233  	<li>there is a default case, and</li>
  4234  	<li>the statement lists in each case, including the default, end in a terminating
  4235  	    statement, or a possibly labeled <a href="#Fallthrough_statements">"fallthrough"
  4236  	    statement</a>.</li>
  4237  	</ul>
  4238  </li>
  4239  
  4240  <li>
  4241  	A <a href="#Select_statements">"select" statement</a> in which:
  4242  	<ul>
  4243  	<li>there are no "break" statements referring to the "select" statement, and</li>
  4244  	<li>the statement lists in each case, including the default if present,
  4245  	    end in a terminating statement.</li>
  4246  	</ul>
  4247  </li>
  4248  
  4249  <li>
  4250  	A <a href="#Labeled_statements">labeled statement</a> labeling
  4251  	a terminating statement.
  4252  </li>
  4253  </ol>
  4254  
  4255  <p>
  4256  All other statements are not terminating.
  4257  </p>
  4258  
  4259  <p>
  4260  A <a href="#Blocks">statement list</a> ends in a terminating statement if the list
  4261  is not empty and its final statement is terminating.
  4262  </p>
  4263  
  4264  
  4265  <h3 id="Empty_statements">Empty statements</h3>
  4266  
  4267  <p>
  4268  The empty statement does nothing.
  4269  </p>
  4270  
  4271  <pre class="ebnf">
  4272  EmptyStmt = .
  4273  </pre>
  4274  
  4275  
  4276  <h3 id="Labeled_statements">Labeled statements</h3>
  4277  
  4278  <p>
  4279  A labeled statement may be the target of a <code>goto</code>,
  4280  <code>break</code> or <code>continue</code> statement.
  4281  </p>
  4282  
  4283  <pre class="ebnf">
  4284  LabeledStmt = Label ":" Statement .
  4285  Label       = identifier .
  4286  </pre>
  4287  
  4288  <pre>
  4289  Error: log.Panic("error encountered")
  4290  </pre>
  4291  
  4292  
  4293  <h3 id="Expression_statements">Expression statements</h3>
  4294  
  4295  <p>
  4296  With the exception of specific built-in functions,
  4297  function and method <a href="#Calls">calls</a> and
  4298  <a href="#Receive_operator">receive operations</a>
  4299  can appear in statement context. Such statements may be parenthesized.
  4300  </p>
  4301  
  4302  <pre class="ebnf">
  4303  ExpressionStmt = Expression .
  4304  </pre>
  4305  
  4306  <p>
  4307  The following built-in functions are not permitted in statement context:
  4308  </p>
  4309  
  4310  <pre>
  4311  append cap complex imag len make new real
  4312  unsafe.Alignof unsafe.Offsetof unsafe.Sizeof
  4313  </pre>
  4314  
  4315  <pre>
  4316  h(x+y)
  4317  f.Close()
  4318  &lt;-ch
  4319  (&lt;-ch)
  4320  len("foo")  // illegal if len is the built-in function
  4321  </pre>
  4322  
  4323  
  4324  <h3 id="Send_statements">Send statements</h3>
  4325  
  4326  <p>
  4327  A send statement sends a value on a channel.
  4328  The channel expression must be of <a href="#Channel_types">channel type</a>,
  4329  the channel direction must permit send operations,
  4330  and the type of the value to be sent must be <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  4331  to the channel's element type.
  4332  </p>
  4333  
  4334  <pre class="ebnf">
  4335  SendStmt = Channel "&lt;-" Expression .
  4336  Channel  = Expression .
  4337  </pre>
  4338  
  4339  <p>
  4340  Both the channel and the value expression are evaluated before communication
  4341  begins. Communication blocks until the send can proceed.
  4342  A send on an unbuffered channel can proceed if a receiver is ready.
  4343  A send on a buffered channel can proceed if there is room in the buffer.
  4344  A send on a closed channel proceeds by causing a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  4345  A send on a <code>nil</code> channel blocks forever.
  4346  </p>
  4347  
  4348  <pre>
  4349  ch &lt;- 3  // send value 3 to channel ch
  4350  </pre>
  4351  
  4352  
  4353  <h3 id="IncDec_statements">IncDec statements</h3>
  4354  
  4355  <p>
  4356  The "++" and "--" statements increment or decrement their operands
  4357  by the untyped <a href="#Constants">constant</a> <code>1</code>.
  4358  As with an assignment, the operand must be <a href="#Address_operators">addressable</a>
  4359  or a map index expression.
  4360  </p>
  4361  
  4362  <pre class="ebnf">
  4363  IncDecStmt = Expression ( "++" | "--" ) .
  4364  </pre>
  4365  
  4366  <p>
  4367  The following <a href="#Assignments">assignment statements</a> are semantically
  4368  equivalent:
  4369  </p>
  4370  
  4371  <pre class="grammar">
  4372  IncDec statement    Assignment
  4373  x++                 x += 1
  4374  x--                 x -= 1
  4375  </pre>
  4376  
  4377  
  4378  <h3 id="Assignments">Assignments</h3>
  4379  
  4380  <pre class="ebnf">
  4381  Assignment = ExpressionList assign_op ExpressionList .
  4382  
  4383  assign_op = [ add_op | mul_op ] "=" .
  4384  </pre>
  4385  
  4386  <p>
  4387  Each left-hand side operand must be <a href="#Address_operators">addressable</a>,
  4388  a map index expression, or (for <code>=</code> assignments only) the
  4389  <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank identifier</a>.
  4390  Operands may be parenthesized.
  4391  </p>
  4392  
  4393  <pre>
  4394  x = 1
  4395  *p = f()
  4396  a[i] = 23
  4397  (k) = &lt;-ch  // same as: k = &lt;-ch
  4398  </pre>
  4399  
  4400  <p>
  4401  An <i>assignment operation</i> <code>x</code> <i>op</i><code>=</code>
  4402  <code>y</code> where <i>op</i> is a binary arithmetic operation is equivalent
  4403  to <code>x</code> <code>=</code> <code>x</code> <i>op</i>
  4404  <code>(y)</code> but evaluates <code>x</code>
  4405  only once.  The <i>op</i><code>=</code> construct is a single token.
  4406  In assignment operations, both the left- and right-hand expression lists
  4407  must contain exactly one single-valued expression, and the left-hand
  4408  expression must not be the blank identifier.
  4409  </p>
  4410  
  4411  <pre>
  4412  a[i] &lt;&lt;= 2
  4413  i &amp;^= 1&lt;&lt;n
  4414  </pre>
  4415  
  4416  <p>
  4417  A tuple assignment assigns the individual elements of a multi-valued
  4418  operation to a list of variables.  There are two forms.  In the
  4419  first, the right hand operand is a single multi-valued expression
  4420  such as a function call, a <a href="#Channel_types">channel</a> or
  4421  <a href="#Map_types">map</a> operation, or a <a href="#Type_assertions">type assertion</a>.
  4422  The number of operands on the left
  4423  hand side must match the number of values.  For instance, if
  4424  <code>f</code> is a function returning two values,
  4425  </p>
  4426  
  4427  <pre>
  4428  x, y = f()
  4429  </pre>
  4430  
  4431  <p>
  4432  assigns the first value to <code>x</code> and the second to <code>y</code>.
  4433  In the second form, the number of operands on the left must equal the number
  4434  of expressions on the right, each of which must be single-valued, and the
  4435  <i>n</i>th expression on the right is assigned to the <i>n</i>th
  4436  operand on the left:
  4437  </p>
  4438  
  4439  <pre>
  4440  one, two, three = '一', '二', '三'
  4441  </pre>
  4442  
  4443  <p>
  4444  The <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank identifier</a> provides a way to
  4445  ignore right-hand side values in an assignment:
  4446  </p>
  4447  
  4448  <pre>
  4449  _ = x       // evaluate x but ignore it
  4450  x, _ = f()  // evaluate f() but ignore second result value
  4451  </pre>
  4452  
  4453  <p>
  4454  The assignment proceeds in two phases.
  4455  First, the operands of <a href="#Index_expressions">index expressions</a>
  4456  and <a href="#Address_operators">pointer indirections</a>
  4457  (including implicit pointer indirections in <a href="#Selectors">selectors</a>)
  4458  on the left and the expressions on the right are all
  4459  <a href="#Order_of_evaluation">evaluated in the usual order</a>.
  4460  Second, the assignments are carried out in left-to-right order.
  4461  </p>
  4462  
  4463  <pre>
  4464  a, b = b, a  // exchange a and b
  4465  
  4466  x := []int{1, 2, 3}
  4467  i := 0
  4468  i, x[i] = 1, 2  // set i = 1, x[0] = 2
  4469  
  4470  i = 0
  4471  x[i], i = 2, 1  // set x[0] = 2, i = 1
  4472  
  4473  x[0], x[0] = 1, 2  // set x[0] = 1, then x[0] = 2 (so x[0] == 2 at end)
  4474  
  4475  x[1], x[3] = 4, 5  // set x[1] = 4, then panic setting x[3] = 5.
  4476  
  4477  type Point struct { x, y int }
  4478  var p *Point
  4479  x[2], p.x = 6, 7  // set x[2] = 6, then panic setting p.x = 7
  4480  
  4481  i = 2
  4482  x = []int{3, 5, 7}
  4483  for i, x[i] = range x {  // set i, x[2] = 0, x[0]
  4484  	break
  4485  }
  4486  // after this loop, i == 0 and x == []int{3, 5, 3}
  4487  </pre>
  4488  
  4489  <p>
  4490  In assignments, each value must be <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  4491  to the type of the operand to which it is assigned, with the following special cases:
  4492  </p>
  4493  
  4494  <ol>
  4495  <li>
  4496  	Any typed value may be assigned to the blank identifier.
  4497  </li>
  4498  
  4499  <li>
  4500  	If an untyped constant
  4501  	is assigned to a variable of interface type or the blank identifier,
  4502  	the constant is first <a href="#Conversions">converted</a> to its
  4503  	 <a href="#Constants">default type</a>.
  4504  </li>
  4505  
  4506  <li>
  4507  	If an untyped boolean value is assigned to a variable of interface type or
  4508  	the blank identifier, it is first converted to type <code>bool</code>.
  4509  </li>
  4510  </ol>
  4511  
  4512  <h3 id="If_statements">If statements</h3>
  4513  
  4514  <p>
  4515  "If" statements specify the conditional execution of two branches
  4516  according to the value of a boolean expression.  If the expression
  4517  evaluates to true, the "if" branch is executed, otherwise, if
  4518  present, the "else" branch is executed.
  4519  </p>
  4520  
  4521  <pre class="ebnf">
  4522  IfStmt = "if" [ SimpleStmt ";" ] Expression Block [ "else" ( IfStmt | Block ) ] .
  4523  </pre>
  4524  
  4525  <pre>
  4526  if x &gt; max {
  4527  	x = max
  4528  }
  4529  </pre>
  4530  
  4531  <p>
  4532  The expression may be preceded by a simple statement, which
  4533  executes before the expression is evaluated.
  4534  </p>
  4535  
  4536  <pre>
  4537  if x := f(); x &lt; y {
  4538  	return x
  4539  } else if x &gt; z {
  4540  	return z
  4541  } else {
  4542  	return y
  4543  }
  4544  </pre>
  4545  
  4546  
  4547  <h3 id="Switch_statements">Switch statements</h3>
  4548  
  4549  <p>
  4550  "Switch" statements provide multi-way execution.
  4551  An expression or type specifier is compared to the "cases"
  4552  inside the "switch" to determine which branch
  4553  to execute.
  4554  </p>
  4555  
  4556  <pre class="ebnf">
  4557  SwitchStmt = ExprSwitchStmt | TypeSwitchStmt .
  4558  </pre>
  4559  
  4560  <p>
  4561  There are two forms: expression switches and type switches.
  4562  In an expression switch, the cases contain expressions that are compared
  4563  against the value of the switch expression.
  4564  In a type switch, the cases contain types that are compared against the
  4565  type of a specially annotated switch expression.
  4566  The switch expression is evaluated exactly once in a switch statement.
  4567  </p>
  4568  
  4569  <h4 id="Expression_switches">Expression switches</h4>
  4570  
  4571  <p>
  4572  In an expression switch,
  4573  the switch expression is evaluated and
  4574  the case expressions, which need not be constants,
  4575  are evaluated left-to-right and top-to-bottom; the first one that equals the
  4576  switch expression
  4577  triggers execution of the statements of the associated case;
  4578  the other cases are skipped.
  4579  If no case matches and there is a "default" case,
  4580  its statements are executed.
  4581  There can be at most one default case and it may appear anywhere in the
  4582  "switch" statement.
  4583  A missing switch expression is equivalent to the boolean value
  4584  <code>true</code>.
  4585  </p>
  4586  
  4587  <pre class="ebnf">
  4588  ExprSwitchStmt = "switch" [ SimpleStmt ";" ] [ Expression ] "{" { ExprCaseClause } "}" .
  4589  ExprCaseClause = ExprSwitchCase ":" StatementList .
  4590  ExprSwitchCase = "case" ExpressionList | "default" .
  4591  </pre>
  4592  
  4593  <p>
  4594  If the switch expression evaluates to an untyped constant, it is first
  4595  <a href="#Conversions">converted</a> to its <a href="#Constants">default type</a>;
  4596  if it is an untyped boolean value, it is first converted to type <code>bool</code>.
  4597  The predeclared untyped value <code>nil</code> cannot be used as a switch expression.
  4598  </p>
  4599  
  4600  <p>
  4601  If a case expression is untyped, it is first <a href="#Conversions">converted</a>
  4602  to the type of the switch expression.
  4603  For each (possibly converted) case expression <code>x</code> and the value <code>t</code>
  4604  of the switch expression, <code>x == t</code> must be a valid <a href="#Comparison_operators">comparison</a>.
  4605  </p>
  4606  
  4607  <p>
  4608  In other words, the switch expression is treated as if it were used to declare and
  4609  initialize a temporary variable <code>t</code> without explicit type; it is that
  4610  value of <code>t</code> against which each case expression <code>x</code> is tested
  4611  for equality.
  4612  </p>
  4613  
  4614  <p>
  4615  In a case or default clause, the last non-empty statement
  4616  may be a (possibly <a href="#Labeled_statements">labeled</a>)
  4617  <a href="#Fallthrough_statements">"fallthrough" statement</a> to
  4618  indicate that control should flow from the end of this clause to
  4619  the first statement of the next clause.
  4620  Otherwise control flows to the end of the "switch" statement.
  4621  A "fallthrough" statement may appear as the last statement of all
  4622  but the last clause of an expression switch.
  4623  </p>
  4624  
  4625  <p>
  4626  The switch expression may be preceded by a simple statement, which
  4627  executes before the expression is evaluated.
  4628  </p>
  4629  
  4630  <pre>
  4631  switch tag {
  4632  default: s3()
  4633  case 0, 1, 2, 3: s1()
  4634  case 4, 5, 6, 7: s2()
  4635  }
  4636  
  4637  switch x := f(); {  // missing switch expression means "true"
  4638  case x &lt; 0: return -x
  4639  default: return x
  4640  }
  4641  
  4642  switch {
  4643  case x &lt; y: f1()
  4644  case x &lt; z: f2()
  4645  case x == 4: f3()
  4646  }
  4647  </pre>
  4648  
  4649  <p>
  4650  Implementation restriction: A compiler may disallow multiple case
  4651  expressions evaluating to the same constant.
  4652  For instance, the current compilers disallow duplicate integer,
  4653  floating point, or string constants in case expressions.
  4654  </p>
  4655  
  4656  <h4 id="Type_switches">Type switches</h4>
  4657  
  4658  <p>
  4659  A type switch compares types rather than values. It is otherwise similar
  4660  to an expression switch. It is marked by a special switch expression that
  4661  has the form of a <a href="#Type_assertions">type assertion</a>
  4662  using the reserved word <code>type</code> rather than an actual type:
  4663  </p>
  4664  
  4665  <pre>
  4666  switch x.(type) {
  4667  // cases
  4668  }
  4669  </pre>
  4670  
  4671  <p>
  4672  Cases then match actual types <code>T</code> against the dynamic type of the
  4673  expression <code>x</code>. As with type assertions, <code>x</code> must be of
  4674  <a href="#Interface_types">interface type</a>, and each non-interface type
  4675  <code>T</code> listed in a case must implement the type of <code>x</code>.
  4676  </p>
  4677  
  4678  <pre class="ebnf">
  4679  TypeSwitchStmt  = "switch" [ SimpleStmt ";" ] TypeSwitchGuard "{" { TypeCaseClause } "}" .
  4680  TypeSwitchGuard = [ identifier ":=" ] PrimaryExpr "." "(" "type" ")" .
  4681  TypeCaseClause  = TypeSwitchCase ":" StatementList .
  4682  TypeSwitchCase  = "case" TypeList | "default" .
  4683  TypeList        = Type { "," Type } .
  4684  </pre>
  4685  
  4686  <p>
  4687  The TypeSwitchGuard may include a
  4688  <a href="#Short_variable_declarations">short variable declaration</a>.
  4689  When that form is used, the variable is declared at the beginning of
  4690  the <a href="#Blocks">implicit block</a> in each clause.
  4691  In clauses with a case listing exactly one type, the variable
  4692  has that type; otherwise, the variable has the type of the expression
  4693  in the TypeSwitchGuard.
  4694  </p>
  4695  
  4696  <p>
  4697  The type in a case may be <a href="#Predeclared_identifiers"><code>nil</code></a>;
  4698  that case is used when the expression in the TypeSwitchGuard
  4699  is a <code>nil</code> interface value.
  4700  </p>
  4701  
  4702  <p>
  4703  Given an expression <code>x</code> of type <code>interface{}</code>,
  4704  the following type switch:
  4705  </p>
  4706  
  4707  <pre>
  4708  switch i := x.(type) {
  4709  case nil:
  4710  	printString("x is nil")                // type of i is type of x (interface{})
  4711  case int:
  4712  	printInt(i)                            // type of i is int
  4713  case float64:
  4714  	printFloat64(i)                        // type of i is float64
  4715  case func(int) float64:
  4716  	printFunction(i)                       // type of i is func(int) float64
  4717  case bool, string:
  4718  	printString("type is bool or string")  // type of i is type of x (interface{})
  4719  default:
  4720  	printString("don't know the type")     // type of i is type of x (interface{})
  4721  }
  4722  </pre>
  4723  
  4724  <p>
  4725  could be rewritten:
  4726  </p>
  4727  
  4728  <pre>
  4729  v := x  // x is evaluated exactly once
  4730  if v == nil {
  4731  	i := v                                 // type of i is type of x (interface{})
  4732  	printString("x is nil")
  4733  } else if i, isInt := v.(int); isInt {
  4734  	printInt(i)                            // type of i is int
  4735  } else if i, isFloat64 := v.(float64); isFloat64 {
  4736  	printFloat64(i)                        // type of i is float64
  4737  } else if i, isFunc := v.(func(int) float64); isFunc {
  4738  	printFunction(i)                       // type of i is func(int) float64
  4739  } else {
  4740  	_, isBool := v.(bool)
  4741  	_, isString := v.(string)
  4742  	if isBool || isString {
  4743  		i := v                         // type of i is type of x (interface{})
  4744  		printString("type is bool or string")
  4745  	} else {
  4746  		i := v                         // type of i is type of x (interface{})
  4747  		printString("don't know the type")
  4748  	}
  4749  }
  4750  </pre>
  4751  
  4752  <p>
  4753  The type switch guard may be preceded by a simple statement, which
  4754  executes before the guard is evaluated.
  4755  </p>
  4756  
  4757  <p>
  4758  The "fallthrough" statement is not permitted in a type switch.
  4759  </p>
  4760  
  4761  <h3 id="For_statements">For statements</h3>
  4762  
  4763  <p>
  4764  A "for" statement specifies repeated execution of a block. The iteration is
  4765  controlled by a condition, a "for" clause, or a "range" clause.
  4766  </p>
  4767  
  4768  <pre class="ebnf">
  4769  ForStmt = "for" [ Condition | ForClause | RangeClause ] Block .
  4770  Condition = Expression .
  4771  </pre>
  4772  
  4773  <p>
  4774  In its simplest form, a "for" statement specifies the repeated execution of
  4775  a block as long as a boolean condition evaluates to true.
  4776  The condition is evaluated before each iteration.
  4777  If the condition is absent, it is equivalent to the boolean value
  4778  <code>true</code>.
  4779  </p>
  4780  
  4781  <pre>
  4782  for a &lt; b {
  4783  	a *= 2
  4784  }
  4785  </pre>
  4786  
  4787  <p>
  4788  A "for" statement with a ForClause is also controlled by its condition, but
  4789  additionally it may specify an <i>init</i>
  4790  and a <i>post</i> statement, such as an assignment,
  4791  an increment or decrement statement. The init statement may be a
  4792  <a href="#Short_variable_declarations">short variable declaration</a>, but the post statement must not.
  4793  Variables declared by the init statement are re-used in each iteration.
  4794  </p>
  4795  
  4796  <pre class="ebnf">
  4797  ForClause = [ InitStmt ] ";" [ Condition ] ";" [ PostStmt ] .
  4798  InitStmt = SimpleStmt .
  4799  PostStmt = SimpleStmt .
  4800  </pre>
  4801  
  4802  <pre>
  4803  for i := 0; i &lt; 10; i++ {
  4804  	f(i)
  4805  }
  4806  </pre>
  4807  
  4808  <p>
  4809  If non-empty, the init statement is executed once before evaluating the
  4810  condition for the first iteration;
  4811  the post statement is executed after each execution of the block (and
  4812  only if the block was executed).
  4813  Any element of the ForClause may be empty but the
  4814  <a href="#Semicolons">semicolons</a> are
  4815  required unless there is only a condition.
  4816  If the condition is absent, it is equivalent to the boolean value
  4817  <code>true</code>.
  4818  </p>
  4819  
  4820  <pre>
  4821  for cond { S() }    is the same as    for ; cond ; { S() }
  4822  for      { S() }    is the same as    for true     { S() }
  4823  </pre>
  4824  
  4825  <p>
  4826  A "for" statement with a "range" clause
  4827  iterates through all entries of an array, slice, string or map,
  4828  or values received on a channel. For each entry it assigns <i>iteration values</i>
  4829  to corresponding <i>iteration variables</i> if present and then executes the block.
  4830  </p>
  4831  
  4832  <pre class="ebnf">
  4833  RangeClause = [ ExpressionList "=" | IdentifierList ":=" ] "range" Expression .
  4834  </pre>
  4835  
  4836  <p>
  4837  The expression on the right in the "range" clause is called the <i>range expression</i>,
  4838  which may be an array, pointer to an array, slice, string, map, or channel permitting
  4839  <a href="#Receive_operator">receive operations</a>.
  4840  As with an assignment, if present the operands on the left must be
  4841  <a href="#Address_operators">addressable</a> or map index expressions; they
  4842  denote the iteration variables. If the range expression is a channel, at most
  4843  one iteration variable is permitted, otherwise there may be up to two.
  4844  If the last iteration variable is the <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank identifier</a>,
  4845  the range clause is equivalent to the same clause without that identifier.
  4846  </p>
  4847  
  4848  <p>
  4849  The range expression is evaluated once before beginning the loop,
  4850  with one exception: if the range expression is an array or a pointer to an array
  4851  and at most one iteration variable is present, only the range expression's
  4852  length is evaluated; if that length is constant,
  4853  <a href="#Length_and_capacity">by definition</a>
  4854  the range expression itself will not be evaluated.
  4855  </p>
  4856  
  4857  <p>
  4858  Function calls on the left are evaluated once per iteration.
  4859  For each iteration, iteration values are produced as follows
  4860  if the respective iteration variables are present:
  4861  </p>
  4862  
  4863  <pre class="grammar">
  4864  Range expression                          1st value          2nd value
  4865  
  4866  array or slice  a  [n]E, *[n]E, or []E    index    i  int    a[i]       E
  4867  string          s  string type            index    i  int    see below  rune
  4868  map             m  map[K]V                key      k  K      m[k]       V
  4869  channel         c  chan E, &lt;-chan E       element  e  E
  4870  </pre>
  4871  
  4872  <ol>
  4873  <li>
  4874  For an array, pointer to array, or slice value <code>a</code>, the index iteration
  4875  values are produced in increasing order, starting at element index 0.
  4876  If at most one iteration variable is present, the range loop produces
  4877  iteration values from 0 up to <code>len(a)-1</code> and does not index into the array
  4878  or slice itself. For a <code>nil</code> slice, the number of iterations is 0.
  4879  </li>
  4880  
  4881  <li>
  4882  For a string value, the "range" clause iterates over the Unicode code points
  4883  in the string starting at byte index 0.  On successive iterations, the index value will be the
  4884  index of the first byte of successive UTF-8-encoded code points in the string,
  4885  and the second value, of type <code>rune</code>, will be the value of
  4886  the corresponding code point.  If the iteration encounters an invalid
  4887  UTF-8 sequence, the second value will be <code>0xFFFD</code>,
  4888  the Unicode replacement character, and the next iteration will advance
  4889  a single byte in the string.
  4890  </li>
  4891  
  4892  <li>
  4893  The iteration order over maps is not specified
  4894  and is not guaranteed to be the same from one iteration to the next.
  4895  If map entries that have not yet been reached are removed during iteration,
  4896  the corresponding iteration values will not be produced. If map entries are
  4897  created during iteration, that entry may be produced during the iteration or
  4898  may be skipped. The choice may vary for each entry created and from one
  4899  iteration to the next.
  4900  If the map is <code>nil</code>, the number of iterations is 0.
  4901  </li>
  4902  
  4903  <li>
  4904  For channels, the iteration values produced are the successive values sent on
  4905  the channel until the channel is <a href="#Close">closed</a>. If the channel
  4906  is <code>nil</code>, the range expression blocks forever.
  4907  </li>
  4908  </ol>
  4909  
  4910  <p>
  4911  The iteration values are assigned to the respective
  4912  iteration variables as in an <a href="#Assignments">assignment statement</a>.
  4913  </p>
  4914  
  4915  <p>
  4916  The iteration variables may be declared by the "range" clause using a form of
  4917  <a href="#Short_variable_declarations">short variable declaration</a>
  4918  (<code>:=</code>).
  4919  In this case their types are set to the types of the respective iteration values
  4920  and their <a href="#Declarations_and_scope">scope</a> is the block of the "for"
  4921  statement; they are re-used in each iteration.
  4922  If the iteration variables are declared outside the "for" statement,
  4923  after execution their values will be those of the last iteration.
  4924  </p>
  4925  
  4926  <pre>
  4927  var testdata *struct {
  4928  	a *[7]int
  4929  }
  4930  for i, _ := range testdata.a {
  4931  	// testdata.a is never evaluated; len(testdata.a) is constant
  4932  	// i ranges from 0 to 6
  4933  	f(i)
  4934  }
  4935  
  4936  var a [10]string
  4937  for i, s := range a {
  4938  	// type of i is int
  4939  	// type of s is string
  4940  	// s == a[i]
  4941  	g(i, s)
  4942  }
  4943  
  4944  var key string
  4945  var val interface {}  // value type of m is assignable to val
  4946  m := map[string]int{"mon":0, "tue":1, "wed":2, "thu":3, "fri":4, "sat":5, "sun":6}
  4947  for key, val = range m {
  4948  	h(key, val)
  4949  }
  4950  // key == last map key encountered in iteration
  4951  // val == map[key]
  4952  
  4953  var ch chan Work = producer()
  4954  for w := range ch {
  4955  	doWork(w)
  4956  }
  4957  
  4958  // empty a channel
  4959  for range ch {}
  4960  </pre>
  4961  
  4962  
  4963  <h3 id="Go_statements">Go statements</h3>
  4964  
  4965  <p>
  4966  A "go" statement starts the execution of a function call
  4967  as an independent concurrent thread of control, or <i>goroutine</i>,
  4968  within the same address space.
  4969  </p>
  4970  
  4971  <pre class="ebnf">
  4972  GoStmt = "go" Expression .
  4973  </pre>
  4974  
  4975  <p>
  4976  The expression must be a function or method call; it cannot be parenthesized.
  4977  Calls of built-in functions are restricted as for
  4978  <a href="#Expression_statements">expression statements</a>.
  4979  </p>
  4980  
  4981  <p>
  4982  The function value and parameters are
  4983  <a href="#Calls">evaluated as usual</a>
  4984  in the calling goroutine, but
  4985  unlike with a regular call, program execution does not wait
  4986  for the invoked function to complete.
  4987  Instead, the function begins executing independently
  4988  in a new goroutine.
  4989  When the function terminates, its goroutine also terminates.
  4990  If the function has any return values, they are discarded when the
  4991  function completes.
  4992  </p>
  4993  
  4994  <pre>
  4995  go Server()
  4996  go func(ch chan&lt;- bool) { for { sleep(10); ch &lt;- true; }} (c)
  4997  </pre>
  4998  
  4999  
  5000  <h3 id="Select_statements">Select statements</h3>
  5001  
  5002  <p>
  5003  A "select" statement chooses which of a set of possible
  5004  <a href="#Send_statements">send</a> or
  5005  <a href="#Receive_operator">receive</a>
  5006  operations will proceed.
  5007  It looks similar to a
  5008  <a href="#Switch_statements">"switch"</a> statement but with the
  5009  cases all referring to communication operations.
  5010  </p>
  5011  
  5012  <pre class="ebnf">
  5013  SelectStmt = "select" "{" { CommClause } "}" .
  5014  CommClause = CommCase ":" StatementList .
  5015  CommCase   = "case" ( SendStmt | RecvStmt ) | "default" .
  5016  RecvStmt   = [ ExpressionList "=" | IdentifierList ":=" ] RecvExpr .
  5017  RecvExpr   = Expression .
  5018  </pre>
  5019  
  5020  <p>
  5021  A case with a RecvStmt may assign the result of a RecvExpr to one or
  5022  two variables, which may be declared using a
  5023  <a href="#Short_variable_declarations">short variable declaration</a>.
  5024  The RecvExpr must be a (possibly parenthesized) receive operation.
  5025  There can be at most one default case and it may appear anywhere
  5026  in the list of cases.
  5027  </p>
  5028  
  5029  <p>
  5030  Execution of a "select" statement proceeds in several steps:
  5031  </p>
  5032  
  5033  <ol>
  5034  <li>
  5035  For all the cases in the statement, the channel operands of receive operations
  5036  and the channel and right-hand-side expressions of send statements are
  5037  evaluated exactly once, in source order, upon entering the "select" statement.
  5038  The result is a set of channels to receive from or send to,
  5039  and the corresponding values to send.
  5040  Any side effects in that evaluation will occur irrespective of which (if any)
  5041  communication operation is selected to proceed.
  5042  Expressions on the left-hand side of a RecvStmt with a short variable declaration
  5043  or assignment are not yet evaluated.
  5044  </li>
  5045  
  5046  <li>
  5047  If one or more of the communications can proceed,
  5048  a single one that can proceed is chosen via a uniform pseudo-random selection.
  5049  Otherwise, if there is a default case, that case is chosen.
  5050  If there is no default case, the "select" statement blocks until
  5051  at least one of the communications can proceed.
  5052  </li>
  5053  
  5054  <li>
  5055  Unless the selected case is the default case, the respective communication
  5056  operation is executed.
  5057  </li>
  5058  
  5059  <li>
  5060  If the selected case is a RecvStmt with a short variable declaration or
  5061  an assignment, the left-hand side expressions are evaluated and the
  5062  received value (or values) are assigned.
  5063  </li>
  5064  
  5065  <li>
  5066  The statement list of the selected case is executed.
  5067  </li>
  5068  </ol>
  5069  
  5070  <p>
  5071  Since communication on <code>nil</code> channels can never proceed,
  5072  a select with only <code>nil</code> channels and no default case blocks forever.
  5073  </p>
  5074  
  5075  <pre>
  5076  var a []int
  5077  var c, c1, c2, c3, c4 chan int
  5078  var i1, i2 int
  5079  select {
  5080  case i1 = &lt;-c1:
  5081  	print("received ", i1, " from c1\n")
  5082  case c2 &lt;- i2:
  5083  	print("sent ", i2, " to c2\n")
  5084  case i3, ok := (&lt;-c3):  // same as: i3, ok := &lt;-c3
  5085  	if ok {
  5086  		print("received ", i3, " from c3\n")
  5087  	} else {
  5088  		print("c3 is closed\n")
  5089  	}
  5090  case a[f()] = &lt;-c4:
  5091  	// same as:
  5092  	// case t := &lt;-c4
  5093  	//	a[f()] = t
  5094  default:
  5095  	print("no communication\n")
  5096  }
  5097  
  5098  for {  // send random sequence of bits to c
  5099  	select {
  5100  	case c &lt;- 0:  // note: no statement, no fallthrough, no folding of cases
  5101  	case c &lt;- 1:
  5102  	}
  5103  }
  5104  
  5105  select {}  // block forever
  5106  </pre>
  5107  
  5108  
  5109  <h3 id="Return_statements">Return statements</h3>
  5110  
  5111  <p>
  5112  A "return" statement in a function <code>F</code> terminates the execution
  5113  of <code>F</code>, and optionally provides one or more result values.
  5114  Any functions <a href="#Defer_statements">deferred</a> by <code>F</code>
  5115  are executed before <code>F</code> returns to its caller.
  5116  </p>
  5117  
  5118  <pre class="ebnf">
  5119  ReturnStmt = "return" [ ExpressionList ] .
  5120  </pre>
  5121  
  5122  <p>
  5123  In a function without a result type, a "return" statement must not
  5124  specify any result values.
  5125  </p>
  5126  <pre>
  5127  func noResult() {
  5128  	return
  5129  }
  5130  </pre>
  5131  
  5132  <p>
  5133  There are three ways to return values from a function with a result
  5134  type:
  5135  </p>
  5136  
  5137  <ol>
  5138  	<li>The return value or values may be explicitly listed
  5139  		in the "return" statement. Each expression must be single-valued
  5140  		and <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  5141  		to the corresponding element of the function's result type.
  5142  <pre>
  5143  func simpleF() int {
  5144  	return 2
  5145  }
  5146  
  5147  func complexF1() (re float64, im float64) {
  5148  	return -7.0, -4.0
  5149  }
  5150  </pre>
  5151  	</li>
  5152  	<li>The expression list in the "return" statement may be a single
  5153  		call to a multi-valued function. The effect is as if each value
  5154  		returned from that function were assigned to a temporary
  5155  		variable with the type of the respective value, followed by a
  5156  		"return" statement listing these variables, at which point the
  5157  		rules of the previous case apply.
  5158  <pre>
  5159  func complexF2() (re float64, im float64) {
  5160  	return complexF1()
  5161  }
  5162  </pre>
  5163  	</li>
  5164  	<li>The expression list may be empty if the function's result
  5165  		type specifies names for its <a href="#Function_types">result parameters</a>.
  5166  		The result parameters act as ordinary local variables
  5167  		and the function may assign values to them as necessary.
  5168  		The "return" statement returns the values of these variables.
  5169  <pre>
  5170  func complexF3() (re float64, im float64) {
  5171  	re = 7.0
  5172  	im = 4.0
  5173  	return
  5174  }
  5175  
  5176  func (devnull) Write(p []byte) (n int, _ error) {
  5177  	n = len(p)
  5178  	return
  5179  }
  5180  </pre>
  5181  	</li>
  5182  </ol>
  5183  
  5184  <p>
  5185  Regardless of how they are declared, all the result values are initialized to
  5186  the <a href="#The_zero_value">zero values</a> for their type upon entry to the
  5187  function. A "return" statement that specifies results sets the result parameters before
  5188  any deferred functions are executed.
  5189  </p>
  5190  
  5191  <p>
  5192  Implementation restriction: A compiler may disallow an empty expression list
  5193  in a "return" statement if a different entity (constant, type, or variable)
  5194  with the same name as a result parameter is in
  5195  <a href="#Declarations_and_scope">scope</a> at the place of the return.
  5196  </p>
  5197  
  5198  <pre>
  5199  func f(n int) (res int, err error) {
  5200  	if _, err := f(n-1); err != nil {
  5201  		return  // invalid return statement: err is shadowed
  5202  	}
  5203  	return
  5204  }
  5205  </pre>
  5206  
  5207  <h3 id="Break_statements">Break statements</h3>
  5208  
  5209  <p>
  5210  A "break" statement terminates execution of the innermost
  5211  <a href="#For_statements">"for"</a>,
  5212  <a href="#Switch_statements">"switch"</a>, or
  5213  <a href="#Select_statements">"select"</a> statement
  5214  within the same function.
  5215  </p>
  5216  
  5217  <pre class="ebnf">
  5218  BreakStmt = "break" [ Label ] .
  5219  </pre>
  5220  
  5221  <p>
  5222  If there is a label, it must be that of an enclosing
  5223  "for", "switch", or "select" statement,
  5224  and that is the one whose execution terminates.
  5225  </p>
  5226  
  5227  <pre>
  5228  OuterLoop:
  5229  	for i = 0; i &lt; n; i++ {
  5230  		for j = 0; j &lt; m; j++ {
  5231  			switch a[i][j] {
  5232  			case nil:
  5233  				state = Error
  5234  				break OuterLoop
  5235  			case item:
  5236  				state = Found
  5237  				break OuterLoop
  5238  			}
  5239  		}
  5240  	}
  5241  </pre>
  5242  
  5243  <h3 id="Continue_statements">Continue statements</h3>
  5244  
  5245  <p>
  5246  A "continue" statement begins the next iteration of the
  5247  innermost <a href="#For_statements">"for" loop</a> at its post statement.
  5248  The "for" loop must be within the same function.
  5249  </p>
  5250  
  5251  <pre class="ebnf">
  5252  ContinueStmt = "continue" [ Label ] .
  5253  </pre>
  5254  
  5255  <p>
  5256  If there is a label, it must be that of an enclosing
  5257  "for" statement, and that is the one whose execution
  5258  advances.
  5259  </p>
  5260  
  5261  <pre>
  5262  RowLoop:
  5263  	for y, row := range rows {
  5264  		for x, data := range row {
  5265  			if data == endOfRow {
  5266  				continue RowLoop
  5267  			}
  5268  			row[x] = data + bias(x, y)
  5269  		}
  5270  	}
  5271  </pre>
  5272  
  5273  <h3 id="Goto_statements">Goto statements</h3>
  5274  
  5275  <p>
  5276  A "goto" statement transfers control to the statement with the corresponding label
  5277  within the same function.
  5278  </p>
  5279  
  5280  <pre class="ebnf">
  5281  GotoStmt = "goto" Label .
  5282  </pre>
  5283  
  5284  <pre>
  5285  goto Error
  5286  </pre>
  5287  
  5288  <p>
  5289  Executing the "goto" statement must not cause any variables to come into
  5290  <a href="#Declarations_and_scope">scope</a> that were not already in scope at the point of the goto.
  5291  For instance, this example:
  5292  </p>
  5293  
  5294  <pre>
  5295  	goto L  // BAD
  5296  	v := 3
  5297  L:
  5298  </pre>
  5299  
  5300  <p>
  5301  is erroneous because the jump to label <code>L</code> skips
  5302  the creation of <code>v</code>.
  5303  </p>
  5304  
  5305  <p>
  5306  A "goto" statement outside a <a href="#Blocks">block</a> cannot jump to a label inside that block.
  5307  For instance, this example:
  5308  </p>
  5309  
  5310  <pre>
  5311  if n%2 == 1 {
  5312  	goto L1
  5313  }
  5314  for n &gt; 0 {
  5315  	f()
  5316  	n--
  5317  L1:
  5318  	f()
  5319  	n--
  5320  }
  5321  </pre>
  5322  
  5323  <p>
  5324  is erroneous because the label <code>L1</code> is inside
  5325  the "for" statement's block but the <code>goto</code> is not.
  5326  </p>
  5327  
  5328  <h3 id="Fallthrough_statements">Fallthrough statements</h3>
  5329  
  5330  <p>
  5331  A "fallthrough" statement transfers control to the first statement of the
  5332  next case clause in a <a href="#Expression_switches">expression "switch" statement</a>.
  5333  It may be used only as the final non-empty statement in such a clause.
  5334  </p>
  5335  
  5336  <pre class="ebnf">
  5337  FallthroughStmt = "fallthrough" .
  5338  </pre>
  5339  
  5340  
  5341  <h3 id="Defer_statements">Defer statements</h3>
  5342  
  5343  <p>
  5344  A "defer" statement invokes a function whose execution is deferred
  5345  to the moment the surrounding function returns, either because the
  5346  surrounding function executed a <a href="#Return_statements">return statement</a>,
  5347  reached the end of its <a href="#Function_declarations">function body</a>,
  5348  or because the corresponding goroutine is <a href="#Handling_panics">panicking</a>.
  5349  </p>
  5350  
  5351  <pre class="ebnf">
  5352  DeferStmt = "defer" Expression .
  5353  </pre>
  5354  
  5355  <p>
  5356  The expression must be a function or method call; it cannot be parenthesized.
  5357  Calls of built-in functions are restricted as for
  5358  <a href="#Expression_statements">expression statements</a>.
  5359  </p>
  5360  
  5361  <p>
  5362  Each time a "defer" statement
  5363  executes, the function value and parameters to the call are
  5364  <a href="#Calls">evaluated as usual</a>
  5365  and saved anew but the actual function is not invoked.
  5366  Instead, deferred functions are invoked immediately before
  5367  the surrounding function returns, in the reverse order
  5368  they were deferred.
  5369  If a deferred function value evaluates
  5370  to <code>nil</code>, execution <a href="#Handling_panics">panics</a>
  5371  when the function is invoked, not when the "defer" statement is executed.
  5372  </p>
  5373  
  5374  <p>
  5375  For instance, if the deferred function is
  5376  a <a href="#Function_literals">function literal</a> and the surrounding
  5377  function has <a href="#Function_types">named result parameters</a> that
  5378  are in scope within the literal, the deferred function may access and modify
  5379  the result parameters before they are returned.
  5380  If the deferred function has any return values, they are discarded when
  5381  the function completes.
  5382  (See also the section on <a href="#Handling_panics">handling panics</a>.)
  5383  </p>
  5384  
  5385  <pre>
  5386  lock(l)
  5387  defer unlock(l)  // unlocking happens before surrounding function returns
  5388  
  5389  // prints 3 2 1 0 before surrounding function returns
  5390  for i := 0; i &lt;= 3; i++ {
  5391  	defer fmt.Print(i)
  5392  }
  5393  
  5394  // f returns 1
  5395  func f() (result int) {
  5396  	defer func() {
  5397  		result++
  5398  	}()
  5399  	return 0
  5400  }
  5401  </pre>
  5402  
  5403  <h2 id="Built-in_functions">Built-in functions</h2>
  5404  
  5405  <p>
  5406  Built-in functions are
  5407  <a href="#Predeclared_identifiers">predeclared</a>.
  5408  They are called like any other function but some of them
  5409  accept a type instead of an expression as the first argument.
  5410  </p>
  5411  
  5412  <p>
  5413  The built-in functions do not have standard Go types,
  5414  so they can only appear in <a href="#Calls">call expressions</a>;
  5415  they cannot be used as function values.
  5416  </p>
  5417  
  5418  <h3 id="Close">Close</h3>
  5419  
  5420  <p>
  5421  For a channel <code>c</code>, the built-in function <code>close(c)</code>
  5422  records that no more values will be sent on the channel.
  5423  It is an error if <code>c</code> is a receive-only channel.
  5424  Sending to or closing a closed channel causes a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  5425  Closing the nil channel also causes a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>.
  5426  After calling <code>close</code>, and after any previously
  5427  sent values have been received, receive operations will return
  5428  the zero value for the channel's type without blocking.
  5429  The multi-valued <a href="#Receive_operator">receive operation</a>
  5430  returns a received value along with an indication of whether the channel is closed.
  5431  </p>
  5432  
  5433  
  5434  <h3 id="Length_and_capacity">Length and capacity</h3>
  5435  
  5436  <p>
  5437  The built-in functions <code>len</code> and <code>cap</code> take arguments
  5438  of various types and return a result of type <code>int</code>.
  5439  The implementation guarantees that the result always fits into an <code>int</code>.
  5440  </p>
  5441  
  5442  <pre class="grammar">
  5443  Call      Argument type    Result
  5444  
  5445  len(s)    string type      string length in bytes
  5446            [n]T, *[n]T      array length (== n)
  5447            []T              slice length
  5448            map[K]T          map length (number of defined keys)
  5449            chan T           number of elements queued in channel buffer
  5450  
  5451  cap(s)    [n]T, *[n]T      array length (== n)
  5452            []T              slice capacity
  5453            chan T           channel buffer capacity
  5454  </pre>
  5455  
  5456  <p>
  5457  The capacity of a slice is the number of elements for which there is
  5458  space allocated in the underlying array.
  5459  At any time the following relationship holds:
  5460  </p>
  5461  
  5462  <pre>
  5463  0 &lt;= len(s) &lt;= cap(s)
  5464  </pre>
  5465  
  5466  <p>
  5467  The length of a <code>nil</code> slice, map or channel is 0.
  5468  The capacity of a <code>nil</code> slice or channel is 0.
  5469  </p>
  5470  
  5471  <p>
  5472  The expression <code>len(s)</code> is <a href="#Constants">constant</a> if
  5473  <code>s</code> is a string constant. The expressions <code>len(s)</code> and
  5474  <code>cap(s)</code> are constants if the type of <code>s</code> is an array
  5475  or pointer to an array and the expression <code>s</code> does not contain
  5476  <a href="#Receive_operator">channel receives</a> or (non-constant)
  5477  <a href="#Calls">function calls</a>; in this case <code>s</code> is not evaluated.
  5478  Otherwise, invocations of <code>len</code> and <code>cap</code> are not
  5479  constant and <code>s</code> is evaluated.
  5480  </p>
  5481  
  5482  <pre>
  5483  const (
  5484  	c1 = imag(2i)                    // imag(2i) = 2.0 is a constant
  5485  	c2 = len([10]float64{2})         // [10]float64{2} contains no function calls
  5486  	c3 = len([10]float64{c1})        // [10]float64{c1} contains no function calls
  5487  	c4 = len([10]float64{imag(2i)})  // imag(2i) is a constant and no function call is issued
  5488  	c5 = len([10]float64{imag(z)})   // invalid: imag(z) is a (non-constant) function call
  5489  )
  5490  var z complex128
  5491  </pre>
  5492  
  5493  <h3 id="Allocation">Allocation</h3>
  5494  
  5495  <p>
  5496  The built-in function <code>new</code> takes a type <code>T</code>,
  5497  allocates storage for a <a href="#Variables">variable</a> of that type
  5498  at run time, and returns a value of type <code>*T</code>
  5499  <a href="#Pointer_types">pointing</a> to it.
  5500  The variable is initialized as described in the section on
  5501  <a href="#The_zero_value">initial values</a>.
  5502  </p>
  5503  
  5504  <pre class="grammar">
  5505  new(T)
  5506  </pre>
  5507  
  5508  <p>
  5509  For instance
  5510  </p>
  5511  
  5512  <pre>
  5513  type S struct { a int; b float64 }
  5514  new(S)
  5515  </pre>
  5516  
  5517  <p>
  5518  allocates storage for a variable of type <code>S</code>,
  5519  initializes it (<code>a=0</code>, <code>b=0.0</code>),
  5520  and returns a value of type <code>*S</code> containing the address
  5521  of the location.
  5522  </p>
  5523  
  5524  <h3 id="Making_slices_maps_and_channels">Making slices, maps and channels</h3>
  5525  
  5526  <p>
  5527  The built-in function <code>make</code> takes a type <code>T</code>,
  5528  which must be a slice, map or channel type,
  5529  optionally followed by a type-specific list of expressions.
  5530  It returns a value of type <code>T</code> (not <code>*T</code>).
  5531  The memory is initialized as described in the section on
  5532  <a href="#The_zero_value">initial values</a>.
  5533  </p>
  5534  
  5535  <pre class="grammar">
  5536  Call             Type T     Result
  5537  
  5538  make(T, n)       slice      slice of type T with length n and capacity n
  5539  make(T, n, m)    slice      slice of type T with length n and capacity m
  5540  
  5541  make(T)          map        map of type T
  5542  make(T, n)       map        map of type T with initial space for n elements
  5543  
  5544  make(T)          channel    unbuffered channel of type T
  5545  make(T, n)       channel    buffered channel of type T, buffer size n
  5546  </pre>
  5547  
  5548  
  5549  <p>
  5550  The size arguments <code>n</code> and <code>m</code> must be of integer type or untyped.
  5551  A <a href="#Constants">constant</a> size argument must be non-negative and
  5552  representable by a value of type <code>int</code>.
  5553  If both <code>n</code> and <code>m</code> are provided and are constant, then
  5554  <code>n</code> must be no larger than <code>m</code>.
  5555  If <code>n</code> is negative or larger than <code>m</code> at run time,
  5556  a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a> occurs.
  5557  </p>
  5558  
  5559  <pre>
  5560  s := make([]int, 10, 100)       // slice with len(s) == 10, cap(s) == 100
  5561  s := make([]int, 1e3)           // slice with len(s) == cap(s) == 1000
  5562  s := make([]int, 1&lt;&lt;63)         // illegal: len(s) is not representable by a value of type int
  5563  s := make([]int, 10, 0)         // illegal: len(s) > cap(s)
  5564  c := make(chan int, 10)         // channel with a buffer size of 10
  5565  m := make(map[string]int, 100)  // map with initial space for 100 elements
  5566  </pre>
  5567  
  5568  
  5569  <h3 id="Appending_and_copying_slices">Appending to and copying slices</h3>
  5570  
  5571  <p>
  5572  The built-in functions <code>append</code> and <code>copy</code> assist in
  5573  common slice operations.
  5574  For both functions, the result is independent of whether the memory referenced
  5575  by the arguments overlaps.
  5576  </p>
  5577  
  5578  <p>
  5579  The <a href="#Function_types">variadic</a> function <code>append</code>
  5580  appends zero or more values <code>x</code>
  5581  to <code>s</code> of type <code>S</code>, which must be a slice type, and
  5582  returns the resulting slice, also of type <code>S</code>.
  5583  The values <code>x</code> are passed to a parameter of type <code>...T</code>
  5584  where <code>T</code> is the <a href="#Slice_types">element type</a> of
  5585  <code>S</code> and the respective
  5586  <a href="#Passing_arguments_to_..._parameters">parameter passing rules</a> apply.
  5587  As a special case, <code>append</code> also accepts a first argument
  5588  assignable to type <code>[]byte</code> with a second argument of
  5589  string type followed by <code>...</code>. This form appends the
  5590  bytes of the string.
  5591  </p>
  5592  
  5593  <pre class="grammar">
  5594  append(s S, x ...T) S  // T is the element type of S
  5595  </pre>
  5596  
  5597  <p>
  5598  If the capacity of <code>s</code> is not large enough to fit the additional
  5599  values, <code>append</code> allocates a new, sufficiently large underlying
  5600  array that fits both the existing slice elements and the additional values.
  5601  Otherwise, <code>append</code> re-uses the underlying array.
  5602  </p>
  5603  
  5604  <pre>
  5605  s0 := []int{0, 0}
  5606  s1 := append(s0, 2)                // append a single element     s1 == []int{0, 0, 2}
  5607  s2 := append(s1, 3, 5, 7)          // append multiple elements    s2 == []int{0, 0, 2, 3, 5, 7}
  5608  s3 := append(s2, s0...)            // append a slice              s3 == []int{0, 0, 2, 3, 5, 7, 0, 0}
  5609  s4 := append(s3[3:6], s3[2:]...)   // append overlapping slice    s4 == []int{3, 5, 7, 2, 3, 5, 7, 0, 0}
  5610  
  5611  var t []interface{}
  5612  t = append(t, 42, 3.1415, "foo")   //                             t == []interface{}{42, 3.1415, "foo"}
  5613  
  5614  var b []byte
  5615  b = append(b, "bar"...)            // append string contents      b == []byte{'b', 'a', 'r' }
  5616  </pre>
  5617  
  5618  <p>
  5619  The function <code>copy</code> copies slice elements from
  5620  a source <code>src</code> to a destination <code>dst</code> and returns the
  5621  number of elements copied.
  5622  Both arguments must have <a href="#Type_identity">identical</a> element type <code>T</code> and must be
  5623  <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a> to a slice of type <code>[]T</code>.
  5624  The number of elements copied is the minimum of
  5625  <code>len(src)</code> and <code>len(dst)</code>.
  5626  As a special case, <code>copy</code> also accepts a destination argument assignable
  5627  to type <code>[]byte</code> with a source argument of a string type.
  5628  This form copies the bytes from the string into the byte slice.
  5629  </p>
  5630  
  5631  <pre class="grammar">
  5632  copy(dst, src []T) int
  5633  copy(dst []byte, src string) int
  5634  </pre>
  5635  
  5636  <p>
  5637  Examples:
  5638  </p>
  5639  
  5640  <pre>
  5641  var a = [...]int{0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7}
  5642  var s = make([]int, 6)
  5643  var b = make([]byte, 5)
  5644  n1 := copy(s, a[0:])            // n1 == 6, s == []int{0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
  5645  n2 := copy(s, s[2:])            // n2 == 4, s == []int{2, 3, 4, 5, 4, 5}
  5646  n3 := copy(b, "Hello, World!")  // n3 == 5, b == []byte("Hello")
  5647  </pre>
  5648  
  5649  
  5650  <h3 id="Deletion_of_map_elements">Deletion of map elements</h3>
  5651  
  5652  <p>
  5653  The built-in function <code>delete</code> removes the element with key
  5654  <code>k</code> from a <a href="#Map_types">map</a> <code>m</code>. The
  5655  type of <code>k</code> must be <a href="#Assignability">assignable</a>
  5656  to the key type of <code>m</code>.
  5657  </p>
  5658  
  5659  <pre class="grammar">
  5660  delete(m, k)  // remove element m[k] from map m
  5661  </pre>
  5662  
  5663  <p>
  5664  If the map <code>m</code> is <code>nil</code> or the element <code>m[k]</code>
  5665  does not exist, <code>delete</code> is a no-op.
  5666  </p>
  5667  
  5668  
  5669  <h3 id="Complex_numbers">Manipulating complex numbers</h3>
  5670  
  5671  <p>
  5672  Three functions assemble and disassemble complex numbers.
  5673  The built-in function <code>complex</code> constructs a complex
  5674  value from a floating-point real and imaginary part, while
  5675  <code>real</code> and <code>imag</code>
  5676  extract the real and imaginary parts of a complex value.
  5677  </p>
  5678  
  5679  <pre class="grammar">
  5680  complex(realPart, imaginaryPart floatT) complexT
  5681  real(complexT) floatT
  5682  imag(complexT) floatT
  5683  </pre>
  5684  
  5685  <p>
  5686  The type of the arguments and return value correspond.
  5687  For <code>complex</code>, the two arguments must be of the same
  5688  floating-point type and the return type is the complex type
  5689  with the corresponding floating-point constituents:
  5690  <code>complex64</code> for <code>float32</code> arguments, and
  5691  <code>complex128</code> for <code>float64</code> arguments.
  5692  If one of the arguments evaluates to an untyped constant, it is first
  5693  <a href="#Conversions">converted</a> to the type of the other argument.
  5694  If both arguments evaluate to untyped constants, they must be non-complex
  5695  numbers or their imaginary parts must be zero, and the return value of
  5696  the function is an untyped complex constant.
  5697  </p>
  5698  
  5699  <p>
  5700  For <code>real</code> and <code>imag</code>, the argument must be
  5701  of complex type, and the return type is the corresponding floating-point
  5702  type: <code>float32</code> for a <code>complex64</code> argument, and
  5703  <code>float64</code> for a <code>complex128</code> argument.
  5704  If the argument evaluates to an untyped constant, it must be a number,
  5705  and the return value of the function is an untyped floating-point constant.
  5706  </p>
  5707  
  5708  <p>
  5709  The <code>real</code> and <code>imag</code> functions together form the inverse of
  5710  <code>complex</code>, so for a value <code>z</code> of a complex type <code>Z</code>,
  5711  <code>z&nbsp;==&nbsp;Z(complex(real(z),&nbsp;imag(z)))</code>.
  5712  </p>
  5713  
  5714  <p>
  5715  If the operands of these functions are all constants, the return
  5716  value is a constant.
  5717  </p>
  5718  
  5719  <pre>
  5720  var a = complex(2, -2)             // complex128
  5721  const b = complex(1.0, -1.4)       // untyped complex constant 1 - 1.4i
  5722  x := float32(math.Cos(math.Pi/2))  // float32
  5723  var c64 = complex(5, -x)           // complex64
  5724  const s uint = complex(1, 0)       // untyped complex constant 1 + 0i can be converted to uint
  5725  _ = complex(1, 2&lt;&lt;s)               // illegal: 2 has floating-point type, cannot shift
  5726  var rl = real(c64)                 // float32
  5727  var im = imag(a)                   // float64
  5728  const c = imag(b)                  // untyped constant -1.4
  5729  _ = imag(3 &lt;&lt; s)                   // illegal: 3 has complex type, cannot shift
  5730  </pre>
  5731  
  5732  <h3 id="Handling_panics">Handling panics</h3>
  5733  
  5734  <p> Two built-in functions, <code>panic</code> and <code>recover</code>,
  5735  assist in reporting and handling <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panics</a>
  5736  and program-defined error conditions.
  5737  </p>
  5738  
  5739  <pre class="grammar">
  5740  func panic(interface{})
  5741  func recover() interface{}
  5742  </pre>
  5743  
  5744  <p>
  5745  While executing a function <code>F</code>,
  5746  an explicit call to <code>panic</code> or a <a href="#Run_time_panics">run-time panic</a>
  5747  terminates the execution of <code>F</code>.
  5748  Any functions <a href="#Defer_statements">deferred</a> by <code>F</code>
  5749  are then executed as usual.
  5750  Next, any deferred functions run by <code>F's</code> caller are run,
  5751  and so on up to any deferred by the top-level function in the executing goroutine.
  5752  At that point, the program is terminated and the error
  5753  condition is reported, including the value of the argument to <code>panic</code>.
  5754  This termination sequence is called <i>panicking</i>.
  5755  </p>
  5756  
  5757  <pre>
  5758  panic(42)
  5759  panic("unreachable")
  5760  panic(Error("cannot parse"))
  5761  </pre>
  5762  
  5763  <p>
  5764  The <code>recover</code> function allows a program to manage behavior
  5765  of a panicking goroutine.
  5766  Suppose a function <code>G</code> defers a function <code>D</code> that calls
  5767  <code>recover</code> and a panic occurs in a function on the same goroutine in which <code>G</code>
  5768  is executing.
  5769  When the running of deferred functions reaches <code>D</code>,
  5770  the return value of <code>D</code>'s call to <code>recover</code> will be the value passed to the call of <code>panic</code>.
  5771  If <code>D</code> returns normally, without starting a new
  5772  <code>panic</code>, the panicking sequence stops. In that case,
  5773  the state of functions called between <code>G</code> and the call to <code>panic</code>
  5774  is discarded, and normal execution resumes.
  5775  Any functions deferred by <code>G</code> before <code>D</code> are then run and <code>G</code>'s
  5776  execution terminates by returning to its caller.
  5777  </p>
  5778  
  5779  <p>
  5780  The return value of <code>recover</code> is <code>nil</code> if any of the following conditions holds:
  5781  </p>
  5782  <ul>
  5783  <li>
  5784  <code>panic</code>'s argument was <code>nil</code>;
  5785  </li>
  5786  <li>
  5787  the goroutine is not panicking;
  5788  </li>
  5789  <li>
  5790  <code>recover</code> was not called directly by a deferred function.
  5791  </li>
  5792  </ul>
  5793  
  5794  <p>
  5795  The <code>protect</code> function in the example below invokes
  5796  the function argument <code>g</code> and protects callers from
  5797  run-time panics raised by <code>g</code>.
  5798  </p>
  5799  
  5800  <pre>
  5801  func protect(g func()) {
  5802  	defer func() {
  5803  		log.Println("done")  // Println executes normally even if there is a panic
  5804  		if x := recover(); x != nil {
  5805  			log.Printf("run time panic: %v", x)
  5806  		}
  5807  	}()
  5808  	log.Println("start")
  5809  	g()
  5810  }
  5811  </pre>
  5812  
  5813  
  5814  <h3 id="Bootstrapping">Bootstrapping</h3>
  5815  
  5816  <p>
  5817  Current implementations provide several built-in functions useful during
  5818  bootstrapping. These functions are documented for completeness but are not
  5819  guaranteed to stay in the language. They do not return a result.
  5820  </p>
  5821  
  5822  <pre class="grammar">
  5823  Function   Behavior
  5824  
  5825  print      prints all arguments; formatting of arguments is implementation-specific
  5826  println    like print but prints spaces between arguments and a newline at the end
  5827  </pre>
  5828  
  5829  
  5830  <h2 id="Packages">Packages</h2>
  5831  
  5832  <p>
  5833  Go programs are constructed by linking together <i>packages</i>.
  5834  A package in turn is constructed from one or more source files
  5835  that together declare constants, types, variables and functions
  5836  belonging to the package and which are accessible in all files
  5837  of the same package. Those elements may be
  5838  <a href="#Exported_identifiers">exported</a> and used in another package.
  5839  </p>
  5840  
  5841  <h3 id="Source_file_organization">Source file organization</h3>
  5842  
  5843  <p>
  5844  Each source file consists of a package clause defining the package
  5845  to which it belongs, followed by a possibly empty set of import
  5846  declarations that declare packages whose contents it wishes to use,
  5847  followed by a possibly empty set of declarations of functions,
  5848  types, variables, and constants.
  5849  </p>
  5850  
  5851  <pre class="ebnf">
  5852  SourceFile       = PackageClause ";" { ImportDecl ";" } { TopLevelDecl ";" } .
  5853  </pre>
  5854  
  5855  <h3 id="Package_clause">Package clause</h3>
  5856  
  5857  <p>
  5858  A package clause begins each source file and defines the package
  5859  to which the file belongs.
  5860  </p>
  5861  
  5862  <pre class="ebnf">
  5863  PackageClause  = "package" PackageName .
  5864  PackageName    = identifier .
  5865  </pre>
  5866  
  5867  <p>
  5868  The PackageName must not be the <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank identifier</a>.
  5869  </p>
  5870  
  5871  <pre>
  5872  package math
  5873  </pre>
  5874  
  5875  <p>
  5876  A set of files sharing the same PackageName form the implementation of a package.
  5877  An implementation may require that all source files for a package inhabit the same directory.
  5878  </p>
  5879  
  5880  <h3 id="Import_declarations">Import declarations</h3>
  5881  
  5882  <p>
  5883  An import declaration states that the source file containing the declaration
  5884  depends on functionality of the <i>imported</i> package
  5885  (<a href="#Program_initialization_and_execution">§Program initialization and execution</a>)
  5886  and enables access to <a href="#Exported_identifiers">exported</a> identifiers
  5887  of that package.
  5888  The import names an identifier (PackageName) to be used for access and an ImportPath
  5889  that specifies the package to be imported.
  5890  </p>
  5891  
  5892  <pre class="ebnf">
  5893  ImportDecl       = "import" ( ImportSpec | "(" { ImportSpec ";" } ")" ) .
  5894  ImportSpec       = [ "." | PackageName ] ImportPath .
  5895  ImportPath       = string_lit .
  5896  </pre>
  5897  
  5898  <p>
  5899  The PackageName is used in <a href="#Qualified_identifiers">qualified identifiers</a>
  5900  to access exported identifiers of the package within the importing source file.
  5901  It is declared in the <a href="#Blocks">file block</a>.
  5902  If the PackageName is omitted, it defaults to the identifier specified in the
  5903  <a href="#Package_clause">package clause</a> of the imported package.
  5904  If an explicit period (<code>.</code>) appears instead of a name, all the
  5905  package's exported identifiers declared in that package's
  5906  <a href="#Blocks">package block</a> will be declared in the importing source
  5907  file's file block and must be accessed without a qualifier.
  5908  </p>
  5909  
  5910  <p>
  5911  The interpretation of the ImportPath is implementation-dependent but
  5912  it is typically a substring of the full file name of the compiled
  5913  package and may be relative to a repository of installed packages.
  5914  </p>
  5915  
  5916  <p>
  5917  Implementation restriction: A compiler may restrict ImportPaths to
  5918  non-empty strings using only characters belonging to
  5919  <a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.3.0/">Unicode's</a>
  5920  L, M, N, P, and S general categories (the Graphic characters without
  5921  spaces) and may also exclude the characters
  5922  <code>!"#$%&amp;'()*,:;&lt;=&gt;?[\]^`{|}</code>
  5923  and the Unicode replacement character U+FFFD.
  5924  </p>
  5925  
  5926  <p>
  5927  Assume we have compiled a package containing the package clause
  5928  <code>package math</code>, which exports function <code>Sin</code>, and
  5929  installed the compiled package in the file identified by
  5930  <code>"lib/math"</code>.
  5931  This table illustrates how <code>Sin</code> is accessed in files
  5932  that import the package after the
  5933  various types of import declaration.
  5934  </p>
  5935  
  5936  <pre class="grammar">
  5937  Import declaration          Local name of Sin
  5938  
  5939  import   "lib/math"         math.Sin
  5940  import m "lib/math"         m.Sin
  5941  import . "lib/math"         Sin
  5942  </pre>
  5943  
  5944  <p>
  5945  An import declaration declares a dependency relation between
  5946  the importing and imported package.
  5947  It is illegal for a package to import itself, directly or indirectly,
  5948  or to directly import a package without
  5949  referring to any of its exported identifiers. To import a package solely for
  5950  its side-effects (initialization), use the <a href="#Blank_identifier">blank</a>
  5951  identifier as explicit package name:
  5952  </p>
  5953  
  5954  <pre>
  5955  import _ "lib/math"
  5956  </pre>
  5957  
  5958  
  5959  <h3 id="An_example_package">An example package</h3>
  5960  
  5961  <p>
  5962  Here is a complete Go package that implements a concurrent prime sieve.
  5963  </p>
  5964  
  5965  <pre>
  5966  package main
  5967  
  5968  import "fmt"
  5969  
  5970  // Send the sequence 2, 3, 4, … to channel 'ch'.
  5971  func generate(ch chan&lt;- int) {
  5972  	for i := 2; ; i++ {
  5973  		ch &lt;- i  // Send 'i' to channel 'ch'.
  5974  	}
  5975  }
  5976  
  5977  // Copy the values from channel 'src' to channel 'dst',
  5978  // removing those divisible by 'prime'.
  5979  func filter(src &lt;-chan int, dst chan&lt;- int, prime int) {
  5980  	for i := range src {  // Loop over values received from 'src'.
  5981  		if i%prime != 0 {
  5982  			dst &lt;- i  // Send 'i' to channel 'dst'.
  5983  		}
  5984  	}
  5985  }
  5986  
  5987  // The prime sieve: Daisy-chain filter processes together.
  5988  func sieve() {
  5989  	ch := make(chan int)  // Create a new channel.
  5990  	go generate(ch)       // Start generate() as a subprocess.
  5991  	for {
  5992  		prime := &lt;-ch
  5993  		fmt.Print(prime, "\n")
  5994  		ch1 := make(chan int)
  5995  		go filter(ch, ch1, prime)
  5996  		ch = ch1
  5997  	}
  5998  }
  5999  
  6000  func main() {
  6001  	sieve()
  6002  }
  6003  </pre>
  6004  
  6005  <h2 id="Program_initialization_and_execution">Program initialization and execution</h2>
  6006  
  6007  <h3 id="The_zero_value">The zero value</h3>
  6008  <p>
  6009  When storage is allocated for a <a href="#Variables">variable</a>,
  6010  either through a declaration or a call of <code>new</code>, or when
  6011  a new value is created, either through a composite literal or a call
  6012  of <code>make</code>,
  6013  and no explicit initialization is provided, the variable or value is
  6014  given a default value.  Each element of such a variable or value is
  6015  set to the <i>zero value</i> for its type: <code>false</code> for booleans,
  6016  <code>0</code> for integers, <code>0.0</code> for floats, <code>""</code>
  6017  for strings, and <code>nil</code> for pointers, functions, interfaces, slices, channels, and maps.
  6018  This initialization is done recursively, so for instance each element of an
  6019  array of structs will have its fields zeroed if no value is specified.
  6020  </p>
  6021  <p>
  6022  These two simple declarations are equivalent:
  6023  </p>
  6024  
  6025  <pre>
  6026  var i int
  6027  var i int = 0
  6028  </pre>
  6029  
  6030  <p>
  6031  After
  6032  </p>
  6033  
  6034  <pre>
  6035  type T struct { i int; f float64; next *T }
  6036  t := new(T)
  6037  </pre>
  6038  
  6039  <p>
  6040  the following holds:
  6041  </p>
  6042  
  6043  <pre>
  6044  t.i == 0
  6045  t.f == 0.0
  6046  t.next == nil
  6047  </pre>
  6048  
  6049  <p>
  6050  The same would also be true after
  6051  </p>
  6052  
  6053  <pre>
  6054  var t T
  6055  </pre>
  6056  
  6057  <h3 id="Package_initialization">Package initialization</h3>
  6058  
  6059  <p>
  6060  Within a package, package-level variables are initialized in
  6061  <i>declaration order</i> but after any of the variables
  6062  they <i>depend</i> on.
  6063  </p>
  6064  
  6065  <p>
  6066  More precisely, a package-level variable is considered <i>ready for
  6067  initialization</i> if it is not yet initialized and either has
  6068  no <a href="#Variable_declarations">initialization expression</a> or
  6069  its initialization expression has no dependencies on uninitialized variables.
  6070  Initialization proceeds by repeatedly initializing the next package-level
  6071  variable that is earliest in declaration order and ready for initialization,
  6072  until there are no variables ready for initialization.
  6073  </p>
  6074  
  6075  <p>
  6076  If any variables are still uninitialized when this
  6077  process ends, those variables are part of one or more initialization cycles,
  6078  and the program is not valid.
  6079  </p>
  6080  
  6081  <p>
  6082  The declaration order of variables declared in multiple files is determined
  6083  by the order in which the files are presented to the compiler: Variables
  6084  declared in the first file are declared before any of the variables declared
  6085  in the second file, and so on.
  6086  </p>
  6087  
  6088  <p>
  6089  Dependency analysis does not rely on the actual values of the
  6090  variables, only on lexical <i>references</i> to them in the source,
  6091  analyzed transitively. For instance, if a variable <code>x</code>'s
  6092  initialization expression refers to a function whose body refers to
  6093  variable <code>y</code> then <code>x</code> depends on <code>y</code>.
  6094  Specifically:
  6095  </p>
  6096  
  6097  <ul>
  6098  <li>
  6099  A reference to a variable or function is an identifier denoting that
  6100  variable or function.
  6101  </li>
  6102  
  6103  <li>
  6104  A reference to a method <code>m</code> is a
  6105  <a href="#Method_values">method value</a> or
  6106  <a href="#Method_expressions">method expression</a> of the form
  6107  <code>t.m</code>, where the (static) type of <code>t</code> is
  6108  not an interface type, and the method <code>m</code> is in the
  6109  <a href="#Method_sets">method set</a> of <code>t</code>.
  6110  It is immaterial whether the resulting function value
  6111  <code>t.m</code> is invoked.
  6112  </li>
  6113  
  6114  <li>
  6115  A variable, function, or method <code>x</code> depends on a variable
  6116  <code>y</code> if <code>x</code>'s initialization expression or body
  6117  (for functions and methods) contains a reference to <code>y</code>
  6118  or to a function or method that depends on <code>y</code>.
  6119  </li>
  6120  </ul>
  6121  
  6122  <p>
  6123  Dependency analysis is performed per package; only references referring
  6124  to variables, functions, and methods declared in the current package
  6125  are considered.
  6126  </p>
  6127  
  6128  <p>
  6129  For example, given the declarations
  6130  </p>
  6131  
  6132  <pre>
  6133  var (
  6134  	a = c + b
  6135  	b = f()
  6136  	c = f()
  6137  	d = 3
  6138  )
  6139  
  6140  func f() int {
  6141  	d++
  6142  	return d
  6143  }
  6144  </pre>
  6145  
  6146  <p>
  6147  the initialization order is <code>d</code>, <code>b</code>, <code>c</code>, <code>a</code>.
  6148  </p>
  6149  
  6150  <p>
  6151  Variables may also be initialized using functions named <code>init</code>
  6152  declared in the package block, with no arguments and no result parameters.
  6153  </p>
  6154  
  6155  <pre>
  6156  func init() { … }
  6157  </pre>
  6158  
  6159  <p>
  6160  Multiple such functions may be defined, even within a single
  6161  source file. The <code>init</code> identifier is not
  6162  <a href="#Declarations_and_scope">declared</a> and thus
  6163  <code>init</code> functions cannot be referred to from anywhere
  6164  in a program.
  6165  </p>
  6166  
  6167  <p>
  6168  A package with no imports is initialized by assigning initial values
  6169  to all its package-level variables followed by calling all <code>init</code>
  6170  functions in the order they appear in the source, possibly in multiple files,
  6171  as presented to the compiler.
  6172  If a package has imports, the imported packages are initialized
  6173  before initializing the package itself. If multiple packages import
  6174  a package, the imported package will be initialized only once.
  6175  The importing of packages, by construction, guarantees that there
  6176  can be no cyclic initialization dependencies.
  6177  </p>
  6178  
  6179  <p>
  6180  Package initialization&mdash;variable initialization and the invocation of
  6181  <code>init</code> functions&mdash;happens in a single goroutine,
  6182  sequentially, one package at a time.
  6183  An <code>init</code> function may launch other goroutines, which can run
  6184  concurrently with the initialization code. However, initialization
  6185  always sequences
  6186  the <code>init</code> functions: it will not invoke the next one
  6187  until the previous one has returned.
  6188  </p>
  6189  
  6190  <p>
  6191  To ensure reproducible initialization behavior, build systems are encouraged
  6192  to present multiple files belonging to the same package in lexical file name
  6193  order to a compiler.
  6194  </p>
  6195  
  6196  
  6197  <h3 id="Program_execution">Program execution</h3>
  6198  <p>
  6199  A complete program is created by linking a single, unimported package
  6200  called the <i>main package</i> with all the packages it imports, transitively.
  6201  The main package must
  6202  have package name <code>main</code> and
  6203  declare a function <code>main</code> that takes no
  6204  arguments and returns no value.
  6205  </p>
  6206  
  6207  <pre>
  6208  func main() { … }
  6209  </pre>
  6210  
  6211  <p>
  6212  Program execution begins by initializing the main package and then
  6213  invoking the function <code>main</code>.
  6214  When that function invocation returns, the program exits.
  6215  It does not wait for other (non-<code>main</code>) goroutines to complete.
  6216  </p>
  6217  
  6218  <h2 id="Errors">Errors</h2>
  6219  
  6220  <p>
  6221  The predeclared type <code>error</code> is defined as
  6222  </p>
  6223  
  6224  <pre>
  6225  type error interface {
  6226  	Error() string
  6227  }
  6228  </pre>
  6229  
  6230  <p>
  6231  It is the conventional interface for representing an error condition,
  6232  with the nil value representing no error.
  6233  For instance, a function to read data from a file might be defined:
  6234  </p>
  6235  
  6236  <pre>
  6237  func Read(f *File, b []byte) (n int, err error)
  6238  </pre>
  6239  
  6240  <h2 id="Run_time_panics">Run-time panics</h2>
  6241  
  6242  <p>
  6243  Execution errors such as attempting to index an array out
  6244  of bounds trigger a <i>run-time panic</i> equivalent to a call of
  6245  the built-in function <a href="#Handling_panics"><code>panic</code></a>
  6246  with a value of the implementation-defined interface type <code>runtime.Error</code>.
  6247  That type satisfies the predeclared interface type
  6248  <a href="#Errors"><code>error</code></a>.
  6249  The exact error values that
  6250  represent distinct run-time error conditions are unspecified.
  6251  </p>
  6252  
  6253  <pre>
  6254  package runtime
  6255  
  6256  type Error interface {
  6257  	error
  6258  	// and perhaps other methods
  6259  }
  6260  </pre>
  6261  
  6262  <h2 id="System_considerations">System considerations</h2>
  6263  
  6264  <h3 id="Package_unsafe">Package <code>unsafe</code></h3>
  6265  
  6266  <p>
  6267  The built-in package <code>unsafe</code>, known to the compiler,
  6268  provides facilities for low-level programming including operations
  6269  that violate the type system. A package using <code>unsafe</code>
  6270  must be vetted manually for type safety and may not be portable.
  6271  The package provides the following interface:
  6272  </p>
  6273  
  6274  <pre class="grammar">
  6275  package unsafe
  6276  
  6277  type ArbitraryType int  // shorthand for an arbitrary Go type; it is not a real type
  6278  type Pointer *ArbitraryType
  6279  
  6280  func Alignof(variable ArbitraryType) uintptr
  6281  func Offsetof(selector ArbitraryType) uintptr
  6282  func Sizeof(variable ArbitraryType) uintptr
  6283  </pre>
  6284  
  6285  <p>
  6286  A <code>Pointer</code> is a <a href="#Pointer_types">pointer type</a> but a <code>Pointer</code>
  6287  value may not be <a href="#Address_operators">dereferenced</a>.
  6288  Any pointer or value of <a href="#Types">underlying type</a> <code>uintptr</code> can be converted to
  6289  a <code>Pointer</code> type and vice versa.
  6290  The effect of converting between <code>Pointer</code> and <code>uintptr</code> is implementation-defined.
  6291  </p>
  6292  
  6293  <pre>
  6294  var f float64
  6295  bits = *(*uint64)(unsafe.Pointer(&amp;f))
  6296  
  6297  type ptr unsafe.Pointer
  6298  bits = *(*uint64)(ptr(&amp;f))
  6299  
  6300  var p ptr = nil
  6301  </pre>
  6302  
  6303  <p>
  6304  The functions <code>Alignof</code> and <code>Sizeof</code> take an expression <code>x</code>
  6305  of any type and return the alignment or size, respectively, of a hypothetical variable <code>v</code>
  6306  as if <code>v</code> was declared via <code>var v = x</code>.
  6307  </p>
  6308  <p>
  6309  The function <code>Offsetof</code> takes a (possibly parenthesized) <a href="#Selectors">selector</a>
  6310  <code>s.f</code>, denoting a field <code>f</code> of the struct denoted by <code>s</code>
  6311  or <code>*s</code>, and returns the field offset in bytes relative to the struct's address.
  6312  If <code>f</code> is an <a href="#Struct_types">embedded field</a>, it must be reachable
  6313  without pointer indirections through fields of the struct.
  6314  For a struct <code>s</code> with field <code>f</code>:
  6315  </p>
  6316  
  6317  <pre>
  6318  uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&amp;s)) + unsafe.Offsetof(s.f) == uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&amp;s.f))
  6319  </pre>
  6320  
  6321  <p>
  6322  Computer architectures may require memory addresses to be <i>aligned</i>;
  6323  that is, for addresses of a variable to be a multiple of a factor,
  6324  the variable's type's <i>alignment</i>.  The function <code>Alignof</code>
  6325  takes an expression denoting a variable of any type and returns the
  6326  alignment of the (type of the) variable in bytes.  For a variable
  6327  <code>x</code>:
  6328  </p>
  6329  
  6330  <pre>
  6331  uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&amp;x)) % unsafe.Alignof(x) == 0
  6332  </pre>
  6333  
  6334  <p>
  6335  Calls to <code>Alignof</code>, <code>Offsetof</code>, and
  6336  <code>Sizeof</code> are compile-time constant expressions of type <code>uintptr</code>.
  6337  </p>
  6338  
  6339  <h3 id="Size_and_alignment_guarantees">Size and alignment guarantees</h3>
  6340  
  6341  <p>
  6342  For the <a href="#Numeric_types">numeric types</a>, the following sizes are guaranteed:
  6343  </p>
  6344  
  6345  <pre class="grammar">
  6346  type                                 size in bytes
  6347  
  6348  byte, uint8, int8                     1
  6349  uint16, int16                         2
  6350  uint32, int32, float32                4
  6351  uint64, int64, float64, complex64     8
  6352  complex128                           16
  6353  </pre>
  6354  
  6355  <p>
  6356  The following minimal alignment properties are guaranteed:
  6357  </p>
  6358  <ol>
  6359  <li>For a variable <code>x</code> of any type: <code>unsafe.Alignof(x)</code> is at least 1.
  6360  </li>
  6361  
  6362  <li>For a variable <code>x</code> of struct type: <code>unsafe.Alignof(x)</code> is the largest of
  6363     all the values <code>unsafe.Alignof(x.f)</code> for each field <code>f</code> of <code>x</code>, but at least 1.
  6364  </li>
  6365  
  6366  <li>For a variable <code>x</code> of array type: <code>unsafe.Alignof(x)</code> is the same as
  6367     <code>unsafe.Alignof(x[0])</code>, but at least 1.
  6368  </li>
  6369  </ol>
  6370  
  6371  <p>
  6372  A struct or array type has size zero if it contains no fields (or elements, respectively) that have a size greater than zero. Two distinct zero-size variables may have the same address in memory.
  6373  </p>