From 4710642d4104918dc72b44ac20ef6528478862bb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Rob Pike
Assigning and fetching map values looks syntactically just like
doing the same for arrays except that the index doesn't need to
-be an integer. An attempt to fetch a map value with a key that
-is not present in the map will cause the program to crash, but
-there is a way to do so safely using a multiple assignment.
+be an integer.
+
+An attempt to fetch a map value with a key that
+is not present in the map will return the zero value for the type
+of the entries
+in the map. For instance, if the map contains integers, looking
+up a non-existent key will return
+Sometimes you need to distinguish a missing entry from
+a zero value. Is there an entry for
+offset := timeZone["EST"]
+
+0.
+"UTC"
+or is that zero value because it's not in the map at all?
+You can discriminate with a form of multiple assignment.
var seconds int
@@ -1136,7 +1150,7 @@ In this example, if
tz is present, seconds
will be set appropriately and ok will be true; if not,
seconds will be set to zero and ok will
be false.
-Here's a function that puts it together:
+Here's a function that puts it together with a nice error report:
func offset(tz string) int {
@@ -1151,7 +1165,7 @@ func offset(tz string) int {
To test for presence in the map without worrying about the actual value,
you can use the blank identifier, a simple underscore (_).
The blank identifier can be assigned or declared with any value of any type, with the
-value discarded harmlessly. For testing presence in a map, use the blank
+value discarded harmlessly. For testing just presence in a map, use the blank
identifier in place of the usual variable for the value.
@@ -1166,6 +1180,7 @@ from the map.
timeZone["PDT"] = 0, false // Now on Standard Time
+
Printing
--
2.52.0