Hi, I am trying to learn Go (I have been working with C++ for a while). I see inconsistency of slices and append
func main() { // append example within capacity var m []int = []int{1, 2, 3} a := m[0:2] b := append(a, 4) a[0] = -1 fmt.Printf("%v, %d, %d\n", m, len(m), cap(m)) fmt.Printf("%v, %d, %d\n", a, len(a), cap(a)) fmt.Printf("%v, %d, %d\n", b, len(b), cap(b)) // append example with more than capacity var m1 []int = []int{1, 2, 3} a1 := m1[0:2] b1 := append(a1, 4, 5) a1[0] = -1 fmt.Printf("%v, %d, %d\n", m1, len(m1), cap(m1)) fmt.Printf("%v, %d, %d\n", a1, len(a1), cap(a1)) fmt.Printf("%v, %d, %d\n", b1, len(b1), cap(b1)) } output is -------- [-1 2 4], 3, 3 [-1 2], 2, 3 [-1 2 4], 3, 3 [-1 2 3], 3, 3 [-1 2], 2, 3 [1 2 4 5], 4, 6 Essentially based on the existing capacity, the assignment of one slice effects other slices. These are stemming from the underlying pointer arithmetic and seems inconsistent. Looks like programmer needs to know the history of capacity before understanding the ramifications of slice assignments. Excuse me if this is basic question. Thought to ask.. Regards Ck -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/golang-nuts/20ba1839-0d7d-4566-855f-5e7920abd0ddo%40googlegroups.com.