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go
golang
Commits
48ba6fe5
Commit
48ba6fe5
authored
Oct 03, 2013
by
Andrew Gerrand
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doc: move spec and memory model back to /ref/
R=golang-dev, r CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14364043
parent
4cc71e33
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7 changed files
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16 additions
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16 deletions
+16
-16
index.html
doc/articles/wiki/index.html
+2
-2
docs.html
doc/docs.html
+2
-2
effective_go.html
doc/effective_go.html
+3
-3
go1.1.html
doc/go1.1.html
+3
-3
go_faq.html
doc/go_faq.html
+4
-4
go_mem.html
doc/go_mem.html
+1
-1
go_spec.html
doc/go_spec.html
+1
-1
No files found.
doc/articles/wiki/index.html
View file @
48ba6fe5
...
...
@@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ function to return <code>*Page</code> and <code>error</code>.
Callers of this function can now check the second parameter; if it is
<code>
nil
</code>
then it has successfully loaded a Page. If not, it will be an
<code>
error
</code>
that can be handled by the caller (see the
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec#Errors"
>
language specification
</a>
for details).
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec#Errors"
>
language specification
</a>
for details).
</p>
<p>
...
...
@@ -616,7 +616,7 @@ Let's put a call to <code>getTitle</code> in each of the handlers:
Catching the error condition in each handler introduces a lot of repeated code.
What if we could wrap each of the handlers in a function that does this
validation and error checking? Go's
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec#Function_literals"
>
function
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec#Function_literals"
>
function
literals
</a>
provide a powerful means of abstracting functionality
that can help us here.
</p>
...
...
doc/docs.html
View file @
48ba6fe5
...
...
@@ -85,12 +85,12 @@ The documentation for the Go standard library.
The documentation for the Go tools.
</p>
<h3
id=
"spec"
><a
href=
"/
doc
/spec"
>
Language Specification
</a></h3>
<h3
id=
"spec"
><a
href=
"/
ref
/spec"
>
Language Specification
</a></h3>
<p>
The official Go Language specification.
</p>
<h3
id=
"go_mem"
><a
href=
"/
doc
/mem"
>
The Go Memory Model
</a></h3>
<h3
id=
"go_mem"
><a
href=
"/
ref
/mem"
>
The Go Memory Model
</a></h3>
<p>
A document that specifies the conditions under which reads of a variable in
one goroutine can be guaranteed to observe values produced by writes to the
...
...
doc/effective_go.html
View file @
48ba6fe5
...
...
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ will be easy for other Go programmers to understand.
<p>
This document gives tips for writing clear, idiomatic Go code.
It augments the
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec"
>
language specification
</a>
,
It augments the
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec"
>
language specification
</a>
,
the
<a
href=
"http://tour.golang.org/"
>
Tour of Go
</a>
,
and
<a
href=
"/doc/code.html"
>
How to Write Go Code
</a>
,
all of which you
...
...
@@ -709,7 +709,7 @@ Erroneous encodings consume one byte and produce the
replacement rune U+FFFD.
(The name (with associated builtin type)
<code>
rune
</code>
is Go terminology for a
single Unicode code point.
See
<a
href=
"http://golang.org/
doc
/spec#Rune_literals"
>
the language specification
</a>
See
<a
href=
"http://golang.org/
ref
/spec#Rune_literals"
>
the language specification
</a>
for details.)
The loop
</p>
...
...
@@ -2969,7 +2969,7 @@ func Serve(queue chan *Request) {
<p>
Because data synchronization occurs on a receive from a channel
(that is, the send "happens before" the receive; see
<a
href=
"/
doc
/mem"
>
The Go Memory Model
</a>
),
<a
href=
"/
ref
/mem"
>
The Go Memory Model
</a>
),
acquisition of the semaphore must be on a channel receive, not a send.
</p>
...
...
doc/go1.1.html
View file @
48ba6fe5
...
...
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ See the <a href="#unicode">Unicode</a> section for more information.
<p>
Go 1.1 now implements
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec#Method_values"
>
method values
</a>
,
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec#Method_values"
>
method values
</a>
,
which are functions that have been bound to a specific receiver value.
For instance, given a
<a
href=
"/pkg/bufio/#Writer"
><code>
Writer
</code></a>
...
...
@@ -129,7 +129,7 @@ only an infinite "for" loop.
<p>
In Go 1.1, the rule about final "return" statements is more permissive.
It introduces the concept of a
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec/#Terminating_statements"
><em>
terminating statement
</em></a>
,
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec/#Terminating_statements"
><em>
terminating statement
</em></a>
,
a statement that is guaranteed to be the last one a function executes.
Examples include
"for" loops with no condition and "if-else"
...
...
@@ -191,7 +191,7 @@ more than 2 billion elements on 64-bit platforms.
<em>
Updating
</em>
:
Most programs will be unaffected by this change.
Because Go does not allow implicit conversions between distinct
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec/#Numeric_types"
>
numeric types
</a>
,
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec/#Numeric_types"
>
numeric types
</a>
,
no programs will stop compiling due to this change.
However, programs that contain implicit assumptions
that
<code>
int
</code>
is only 32 bits may change behavior.
...
...
doc/go_faq.html
View file @
48ba6fe5
...
...
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ Go became a public open source project on November 10, 2009.
After a couple of years of very active design and development, stability was called for and
Go 1 was
<a
href=
"http://blog.golang.org/2012/03/go-version-1-is-released.html"
>
released
</a>
on March 28, 2012.
Go 1, which includes a
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec"
>
language specification
</a>
,
Go 1, which includes a
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec"
>
language specification
</a>
,
<a
href=
"/pkg/"
>
standard libraries
</a>
,
and
<a
href=
"/cmd/go/"
>
custom tools
</a>
,
provides a stable foundation for creating reliable products, projects, and publications.
...
...
@@ -1278,7 +1278,7 @@ What operations are atomic? What about mutexes?</h3>
<p>
We haven't fully defined it all yet, but some details about atomicity are
available in the
<a
href=
"/
doc
/mem"
>
Go Memory Model specification
</a>
.
available in the
<a
href=
"/
ref
/mem"
>
Go Memory Model specification
</a>
.
</p>
<p>
...
...
@@ -1334,7 +1334,7 @@ will experience performance degradation when using
multiple OS threads.
This is because sending data between threads involves switching
contexts, which has significant cost.
For instance, the
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec#An_example_package"
>
prime sieve example
</a>
For instance, the
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec#An_example_package"
>
prime sieve example
</a>
from the Go specification has no significant parallelism although it launches many
goroutines; increasing
<code>
GOMAXPROCS
</code>
is more likely to slow it down than
to speed it up.
...
...
@@ -1357,7 +1357,7 @@ is not Parallelism</a>.
Why do T and *T have different method sets?
</h3>
<p>
From the
<a
href=
"/
doc
/spec#Types"
>
Go Spec
</a>
:
From the
<a
href=
"/
ref
/spec#Types"
>
Go Spec
</a>
:
</p>
<blockquote>
...
...
doc/go_mem.html
View file @
48ba6fe5
<!--{
"Title": "The Go Memory Model",
"Subtitle": "Version of March 6, 2012",
"Path": "/
doc
/mem"
"Path": "/
ref
/mem"
}-->
<style>
...
...
doc/go_spec.html
View file @
48ba6fe5
<!--{
"Title": "The Go Programming Language Specification",
"Subtitle": "Version of Oct 3, 2013",
"Path": "/
doc
/spec"
"Path": "/
ref
/spec"
}-->
<!--
...
...
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