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by ragnese
173 days ago
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I haven't written any Go in many years (way before generics), but I'm shocked that something so implicit and magical is now valid Go syntax. I didn't look up this syntax or its rules, so I'm just reading the code totally naively. Am I to understand that the `user` variable in the final return statement is not really being treated as a value, but as a reference? Because the second part of the return (json.NewDecoder(resp.Body).Decode(&user)) sure looks like it's going to change the value of `user`. My brain wants to think it's "too late" to set `user` to anything by then, because the value was already read out (because I'm assuming the tuple is being constructed by evaluating its arguments left-to-right, like I thought Go's spec enforced for function arg evaluation). I would think that the returned value would be: `(nil, return-value-of-Decode-call)`. I'm obviously wrong, of course, but whereas I always found Go code to at least be fairly simple--albeit tedious--to read, I find this to be very unintuitive and fairly "magical" for Go's typical design sensibilities. No real point, here. Just felt so surprised that I couldn't resist saying so... |
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`user` is typed as a struct, so it's always going to be a struct in the output, it can't be nil (it would have to be `*User`). And Decoder.Decode mutates the parameter in place. Named return values essentially create locals for you. And since the function does not use naked returns, it's essentially saving space (and adding some documentation in some cases though here the value is nil) for this:
https://godbolt.org/z/8Yv49Yvr5However Go's named return values are definitely weird and spooky:
returns 2, not 1.