Consider the following example. I don't fully understand what happens "in the background" and seek an explanation. This version seems to make a copy of the struct Foo when I call AddToEntry from the main function. Right? How can I "proof" this in the code?
When go makes a copy of the struct, I am just manipulating the copy of the struct and when I get back to the main function I see the original as before?
When I expect a pointer (see comment in the code), everything is fine, my struct is not copied. How can avoid this kind of "error"? How can I make sure I am not copying the struct? Is there a possible compile time/run time check for that, or do I have be careful?
package main
import (
"fmt"
)
type Foo struct {
Entry []string
}
func MakeFoo() Foo {
a:=Foo{}
a.Entry = append(a.Entry,"first")
return a
}
// if I change (f Foo) to (f *Foo), I get
// the "desired" result
func (f Foo) AddToEntry() {
f.Entry = append(f.Entry,"second")
}
func main() {
f:=MakeFoo()
fmt.Println(f) // {[first]}
f.AddToEntry()
fmt.Println(f) // {[first]}
}
fmt.Printf("%p\n",&MyObject)to see when an object is copied. – topskip Aug 7 '12 at 5:47