| The first Go program |
| 18 Jul 2013 |
| Tags: history |
| |
| Andrew Gerrand |
| |
| * Introduction |
| |
| Brad Fitzpatrick and I (Andrew Gerrand) recently started restructuring |
| [[https://golang.org/cmd/godoc/][godoc]], and it occurred to me that it is one |
| of the oldest Go programs. |
| Robert Griesemer started writing it back in early 2009, |
| and we're still using it today. |
| |
| When I [[https://twitter.com/enneff/status/357403054632484865][tweeted]] about |
| this, Dave Cheney replied with an [[https://twitter.com/davecheney/status/357406479415914497][interesting question]]: |
| what is the oldest Go program? Rob Pike dug into his mail and found it |
| in an old message to Robert and Ken Thompson. |
| |
| What follows is the first Go program. It was written by Rob in February 2008, |
| when the team was just Rob, Robert, and Ken. They had a solid feature list |
| (mentioned in [[https://commandcenter.blogspot.com.au/2012/06/less-is-exponentially-more.html][this blog post]]) |
| and a rough language specfication. Ken had just finished the first working version of |
| a Go compiler (it didn't produce native code, but rather transliterated Go code |
| to C for fast prototyping) and it was time to try writing a program with it. |
| |
| Rob sent mail to the "Go team": |
| |
| From: Rob 'Commander' Pike |
| Date: Wed, Feb 6, 2008 at 3:42 PM |
| To: Ken Thompson, Robert Griesemer |
| Subject: slist |
| |
| it works now. |
| |
| roro=% a.out |
| (defn foo (add 12 34)) |
| return: icounter = 4440 |
| roro=% |
| |
| here's the code. |
| some ugly hackery to get around the lack of strings. |
| |
| |
| (The `icounter` line in the program output is the number of executed |
| statements, printed for debugging.) |
| |
| .code first-go-program/slist.go |
| |
| The program parses and prints an |
| [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S-expression][S-expression]]. |
| It takes no user input and has no imports, relying only on the built-in |
| `print` facility for output. |
| It was written literally the first day there was a |
| [[https://golang.org/change/8b8615138da3][working but rudimentary compiler]]. |
| Much of the language wasn't implemented and some of it wasn't even specified. |
| |
| Still, the basic flavor of the language today is recognizable in this program. |
| Type and variable declarations, control flow, and package statements haven't |
| changed much. |
| |
| But there are many differences and absences. |
| Most significant are the lack of concurrency and interfaces—both |
| considered essential since day 1 but not yet designed. |
| |
| A `func` was a `function`, and its signature specified return values |
| _before_ arguments, separating them with `<-`, which we now use as the channel |
| send/receive operator. For example, the `WhiteSpace` function takes the integer |
| `c` and returns a boolean. |
| |
| function WhiteSpace(bool <- c int) |
| |
| This arrow was a stop-gap measure until a better syntax arose for declaring |
| multiple return values. |
| |
| Methods were distinct from functions and had their own keyword. |
| |
| method (this *Slist) Car(*Slist <-) { |
| return this.list.car; |
| } |
| |
| And methods were pre-declared in the struct definition, although that changed soon. |
| |
| type Slist struct { |
| ... |
| Car method(*Slist <-); |
| } |
| |
| There were no strings, although they were in the spec. |
| To work around this, Rob had to build the input string as an `uint8` array with |
| a clumsy construction. (Arrays were rudimentary and slices hadn't been designed |
| yet, let alone implemented, although there was the unimplemented concept of an |
| "open array".) |
| |
| input[i] = '('; i = i + 1; |
| input[i] = 'd'; i = i + 1; |
| input[i] = 'e'; i = i + 1; |
| input[i] = 'f'; i = i + 1; |
| input[i] = 'n'; i = i + 1; |
| input[i] = ' '; i = i + 1; |
| ... |
| |
| Both `panic` and `print` were built-in keywords, not pre-declared functions. |
| |
| print "parse error: expected ", c, "\n"; |
| panic "parse"; |
| |
| And there are many other little differences; see if you can identify some others. |
| |
| Less than two years after this program was written, Go was released as an |
| open source project. Looking back, it is striking how much the language has |
| grown and matured. (The last thing to change between this proto-Go and the Go |
| we know today was the elimination of semicolons.) |
| |
| But even more striking is how much we have learned about _writing_ Go code. |
| For instance, Rob called his method receivers `this`, but now we use shorter |
| context-specific names. There are hundreds of more significant examples |
| and to this day we're still discovering better ways to write Go code. |
| (Check out the [[https://github.com/golang/glog][glog package]]'s clever trick for |
| [[https://github.com/golang/glog/blob/c6f9652c7179652e2fd8ed7002330db089f4c9db/glog.go#L893][handling verbosity levels]].) |
| |
| I wonder what we'll learn tomorrow. |
| |