On Thu, Oct 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM wrote:
>
> I suppose the change I'm going for is a semicolon won't be inserted if the
> next line starts with an operator.
>
> That seems to make pretty strait forward sense as no line will start with an
> operator in the first place.
The rule can't be that simpl
I suppose the change I'm going for is a semicolon won't be inserted if the next
line starts with an operator.
That seems to make pretty strait forward sense as no line will start with an
operator in the first place.
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On Thu, Oct 31, 2019 at 1:49 PM Max wrote:
>
> It's not just a matter of gofmt: the "implicit semicolon" rule of Go syntax
> is triggered at the end of this line
> ```
> if Variable1 == true
> ```
> causing it to be parsed as
> ```
> if Variable1 == true;
> ```
> Any operator in the following lin
Indeed.
It's not just a matter of gofmt: the "implicit semicolon" rule of Go syntax
is triggered at the end of this line
```
if Variable1 == true
```
causing it to be parsed as
```
if Variable1 == true;
```
Any operator in the following line arrives too late to change that.
So to implement what
Your code doesn't even compile.
On Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 1:13:50 PM UTC-4, kevma...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> I apologize for submitting yet another go format "issue". I'm more so
> gauging the community on this idea. Furthermore, I ask that you understand
> I'm not sure if this type of code