You can use a vararg syntax similar to C:
package main
import "fmt"
func my_func( args ...int) int {
sum := 0
for _,v := range args {
sum = sum + v
}
return sum;
}
func main() {
arr := []int{2,4}
sum := my_func(arr...)
fmt.Println("Sum is ", sum)
}
Now you can sum as many things as you'd like. Notice the important ...
after when you call the my_func
function.
Running example: http://ideone.com/8htWfx
Either your function is varargs, in which you can use a slice with the ...
notation as Hunter McMillen shows, or your function has a fixed number of arguments and you can unpack them when writing your code.
If you really want to do this dynamically on a function of fixed number of arguments, you can use reflection:
package main
import "fmt"
import "reflect"
func my_func(a, b int) (int) {
return a + b
}
func main() {
arr := []int{2,4}
var args []reflect.Value
for _, x := range arr {
args = append(args, reflect.ValueOf(x))
}
fun := reflect.ValueOf(my_func)
result := fun.Call(args)
sum := result[0].Interface().(int)
fmt.Println("Sum is ", sum)
}
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