On Thu, Oct 27, 2022 at 9:16 PM Rob Pike <r...@golang.org> wrote: > For those watching at home, the error message is > > compile: data too large >
Yes, but as I noted in my reply if you remove the composite literal initializer (i.e., reducing it to just var x = [1 << 34]byte{}) I get this error (using Go 1.19 on macOS): ./x.go:3:5: main.x: symbol too large (17179869184 bytes > 2000000000 bytes) That appears to be the primary limit. That including a composite literal initializer that exceeds that limit, causing a more ambiguous error, seems like a related, but secondary, issue. > On Fri, Oct 28, 2022 at 12:43 PM eric...@arm.com <eric.f...@arm.com> > wrote: > >> The spec says that " The length is part of the array's type; it must >> evaluate to a non-negative constant <https://go.dev/ref/spec#Constants> >> representable <https://go.dev/ref/spec#Representability> by a value of >> type int. ", so on a 64-bit environment, I assume that the maximum array >> length should be math.MaxInt64, am I right ? But the following code doesn't >> compile: >> >> package main >> var x = [1<<34]byte{1<<23: 23, 1<<24: 24, 1<<33:33 >> >> -- Kurtis Rader Caretaker of the exceptional canines Junior and Hank -- 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/CABx2%3DD-QnJbRS3Vj-LWXKePOp2Q3FGi15tpEOhFbd2%3Df%3D5fEfQ%40mail.gmail.com.