Normally, I will initialize a struct like:
item1 := Item{1, "Foo"}
However, I've recently seen code initializing with parens:
item2 := (Item{2, "Bar"})
reflect
returns the same Item
name.
What does initializing in parentheses do and when is it preferred?
Here's some Go code to try this out:
It does nothing special, those 2 lines are identical.
However, when you want to use that in an if
statement for example, the parentheses will be required, else you get a compile time error:
if i := Item{3, "a"}; i.Id == 3 {
}
Results in:
expected boolean expression, found simple statement (missing parentheses around composite literal?) (and 1 more errors)
This is because a parsing ambiguity arises: it's not obvious if the opening brace would be part of the composite literal or the body of the if
statement.
Using parentheses will make it unambiguous for the compiler, so this works:
if i := (Item{3, "a"}); i.Id == 3 {
}
For details, see: Struct in for loop initializer
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