What is the appropriate way to clear a slice in Go?
Here's what I've found in the go forums:
// test.go
package main
import (
"fmt"
)
func main() {
letters := []string{"a", "b", "c", "d"}
fmt.Println(cap(letters))
fmt.Println(len(letters))
// clear the slice
letters = letters[:0]
fmt.Println(cap(letters))
fmt.Println(len(letters))
}
Is this correct?
To clarify, the buffer is cleared so it can be reused.
An example is Buffer.Truncate function in the bytes package.
Notice that Reset just calls Truncate(0). So it appears that in this case line 70 would evaluate: b.buf = b.buf[0 : 0]
http://golang.org/src/pkg/bytes/buffer.go
// Truncate discards all but the first n unread bytes from the buffer.
60 // It panics if n is negative or greater than the length of the buffer.
61 func (b *Buffer) Truncate(n int) {
62 b.lastRead = opInvalid
63 switch {
64 case n < 0 || n > b.Len():
65 panic("bytes.Buffer: truncation out of range")
66 case n == 0:
67 // Reuse buffer space.
68 b.off = 0
69 }
70 b.buf = b.buf[0 : b.off+n]
71 }
72
73 // Reset resets the buffer so it has no content.
74 // b.Reset() is the same as b.Truncate(0).
75 func (b *Buffer) Reset() { b.Truncate(0) }
The easiest way to check if a slice is empty – to check the length of the slice, if it's 0 then the slice is empty. To get the length of a slice, we use the len() function which is an inbuilt function.
Setting the slice to nil
is the best way to clear a slice. nil
slices in go are perfectly well behaved and setting the slice to nil
will release the underlying memory to the garbage collector.
See playground
package main
import (
"fmt"
)
func dump(letters []string) {
fmt.Println("letters = ", letters)
fmt.Println(cap(letters))
fmt.Println(len(letters))
for i := range letters {
fmt.Println(i, letters[i])
}
}
func main() {
letters := []string{"a", "b", "c", "d"}
dump(letters)
// clear the slice
letters = nil
dump(letters)
// add stuff back to it
letters = append(letters, "e")
dump(letters)
}
Prints
letters = [a b c d]
4
4
0 a
1 b
2 c
3 d
letters = []
0
0
letters = [e]
1
1
0 e
Note that slices can easily be aliased so that two slices point to the same underlying memory. The setting to nil
will remove that aliasing.
This method changes the capacity to zero though.
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