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specCon18 2023-12-18 03:40:05 -05:00
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generics/generics.go Normal file
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package main
import "fmt"
//as an example of a generic function,
//MapKeys takes a map of any type and returns a slice of its keys.
//this function has two type parameters - K and V; K has the comparable constraint
//meaning that we can compare values of this type with the == and != operators
//this is required for map keys in Go V has the any constraint meaning that its
// not restricted in any way(any is an alias for interface{})
func MapKeys[K comparable, V any](m map [K]V) []K {
r := make([]K,0,len(m))
for k := range m {
r = append(r,k)
}
return r
}
//as example of a generic type, List is a singly-linked list with values of any type
type List[T any] struct {
head, tail *element[T]
}
type element[T any] struct {
next *element[T]
val T
}
//We can define methods on generic types just like we do on regular types,
// but we have to keep the type parameters in place.
// the type is List[T] not List
func (lst *List[T]) Push(v T) {
if lst.tail == nil {
lst.head = &element[T]{val:v}
lst.tail = lst.head
} else {
lst.tail.next = &element[T]{val: v}
lst.tail = lst.tail.next
}
}
func (lst *List[T]) GetAll() []T {
var elems []T
for e := lst.head; e != nil; e = e.next {
elems = append(elems, e.val)
}
return elems
}
func main() {
var m = map[int]string{1: "2",2:"4",4:"8"}
//When invoking genric functions, we can often
// rely on type inference. note that we dont have to specify
// the types for K and V when calling MapKeys - the compiler infers them automatically
fmt.Println("keys:",MapKeys(m))
//though we could be explicit
_ = MapKeys[int,string](m)
lst := List[int]{}
lst.Push(10)
lst.Push(13)
lst.Push(23)
fmt.Println("list:",lst.GetAll())
}