| # Go's Declaration Syntax |
| 7 Jul 2010 |
| Tags: c, syntax, ethos |
| Summary: Why Go's declaration syntax doesn't look like, and is much simpler than, C's. |
| OldURL: /gos-declaration-syntax |
| |
| Rob Pike |
| |
| ## Introduction |
| |
| Newcomers to Go wonder why the declaration syntax is different from the |
| tradition established in the C family. |
| In this post we'll compare the two approaches and explain why Go's declarations look as they do. |
| |
| ## C syntax |
| |
| First, let's talk about C syntax. C took an unusual and clever approach |
| to declaration syntax. |
| Instead of describing the types with special syntax, |
| one writes an expression involving the item being declared, |
| and states what type that expression will have. Thus |
| |
| int x; |
| |
| declares x to be an int: the expression 'x' will have type int. |
| In general, to figure out how to write the type of a new variable, |
| write an expression involving that variable that evaluates to a basic type, |
| then put the basic type on the left and the expression on the right. |
| |
| Thus, the declarations |
| |
| int *p; |
| int a[3]; |
| |
| state that p is a pointer to int because '\*p' has type int, |
| and that a is an array of ints because a[3] (ignoring the particular index value, |
| which is punned to be the size of the array) has type int. |
| |
| What about functions? Originally, C's function declarations wrote the types |
| of the arguments outside the parens, like this: |
| |
| int main(argc, argv) |
| int argc; |
| char *argv[]; |
| { /* ... */ } |
| |
| Again, we see that main is a function because the expression main(argc, |
| argv) returns an int. |
| In modern notation we'd write |
| |
| int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { /* ... */ } |
| |
| but the basic structure is the same. |
| |
| This is a clever syntactic idea that works well for simple types but can get confusing fast. |
| The famous example is declaring a function pointer. |
| Follow the rules and you get this: |
| |
| int (*fp)(int a, int b); |
| |
| Here, fp is a pointer to a function because if you write the expression (\*fp)(a, |
| b) you'll call a function that returns int. |
| What if one of fp's arguments is itself a function? |
| |
| int (*fp)(int (*ff)(int x, int y), int b) |
| |
| That's starting to get hard to read. |
| |
| Of course, we can leave out the name of the parameters when we declare a function, so main can be declared |
| |
| int main(int, char *[]) |
| |
| Recall that argv is declared like this, |
| |
| char *argv[] |
| |
| so you drop the name from the middle of its declaration to construct its type. |
| It's not obvious, though, that you declare something of type char \*[] by |
| putting its name in the middle. |
| |
| And look what happens to fp's declaration if you don't name the parameters: |
| |
| int (*fp)(int (*)(int, int), int) |
| |
| Not only is it not obvious where to put the name inside |
| |
| int (*)(int, int) |
| |
| it's not exactly clear that it's a function pointer declaration at all. |
| And what if the return type is a function pointer? |
| |
| int (*(*fp)(int (*)(int, int), int))(int, int) |
| |
| It's hard even to see that this declaration is about fp. |
| |
| You can construct more elaborate examples but these should illustrate some |
| of the difficulties that C's declaration syntax can introduce. |
| |
| There's one more point that needs to be made, though. |
| Because type and declaration syntax are the same, |
| it can be difficult to parse expressions with types in the middle. |
| This is why, for instance, C casts always parenthesize the type, as in |
| |
| (int)M_PI |
| |
| ## Go syntax |
| |
| Languages outside the C family usually use a distinct type syntax in declarations. |
| Although it's a separate point, the name usually comes first, |
| often followed by a colon. |
| Thus our examples above become something like (in a fictional but illustrative language) |
| |
| x: int |
| p: pointer to int |
| a: array[3] of int |
| |
| These declarations are clear, if verbose - you just read them left to right. |
| Go takes its cue from here, but in the interests of brevity it drops the |
| colon and removes some of the keywords: |
| |
| x int |
| p *int |
| a [3]int |
| |
| There is no direct correspondence between the look of [3]int and how to |
| use a in an expression. |
| (We'll come back to pointers in the next section.) You gain clarity at the |
| cost of a separate syntax. |
| |
| Now consider functions. Let's transcribe the declaration for main as it would read in Go, |
| although the real main function in Go takes no arguments: |
| |
| func main(argc int, argv []string) int |
| |
| Superficially that's not much different from C, |
| other than the change from `char` arrays to strings, |
| but it reads well from left to right: |
| |
| function main takes an int and a slice of strings and returns an int. |
| |
| Drop the parameter names and it's just as clear - they're always first so there's no confusion. |
| |
| func main(int, []string) int |
| |
| One merit of this left-to-right style is how well it works as the types |
| become more complex. |
| Here's a declaration of a function variable (analogous to a function pointer in C): |
| |
| f func(func(int,int) int, int) int |
| |
| Or if f returns a function: |
| |
| f func(func(int,int) int, int) func(int, int) int |
| |
| It still reads clearly, from left to right, |
| and it's always obvious which name is being declared - the name comes first. |
| |
| The distinction between type and expression syntax makes it easy to write and invoke closures in Go: |
| |
| sum := func(a, b int) int { return a+b } (3, 4) |
| |
| ## Pointers |
| |
| Pointers are the exception that proves the rule. |
| Notice that in arrays and slices, for instance, |
| Go's type syntax puts the brackets on the left of the type but the expression |
| syntax puts them on the right of the expression: |
| |
| var a []int |
| x = a[1] |
| |
| For familiarity, Go's pointers use the \* notation from C, |
| but we could not bring ourselves to make a similar reversal for pointer types. |
| Thus pointers work like this |
| |
| var p *int |
| x = *p |
| |
| We couldn't say |
| |
| var p *int |
| x = p* |
| |
| because that postfix \* would conflate with multiplication. We could have used the Pascal ^, for example: |
| |
| var p ^int |
| x = p^ |
| |
| and perhaps we should have (and chosen another operator for xor), |
| because the prefix asterisk on both types and expressions complicates things |
| in a number of ways. |
| For instance, although one can write |
| |
| []int("hi") |
| |
| as a conversion, one must parenthesize the type if it starts with a \*: |
| |
| (*int)(nil) |
| |
| Had we been willing to give up \* as pointer syntax, those parentheses would be unnecessary. |
| |
| So Go's pointer syntax is tied to the familiar C form, |
| but those ties mean that we cannot break completely from using parentheses |
| to disambiguate types and expressions in the grammar. |
| |
| Overall, though, we believe Go's type syntax is easier to understand than C's, especially when things get complicated. |
| |
| ## Notes |
| |
| Go's declarations read left to right. It's been pointed out that C's read in a spiral! |
| See [ The "Clockwise/Spiral Rule"](http://c-faq.com/decl/spiral.anderson.html) by David Anderson. |