// Copyright 2019 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // This file shows some examples of generic types. package p // List is just what it says - a slice of E elements. type List[E any] []E // A generic (parameterized) type must always be instantiated // before it can be used to designate the type of a variable // (including a struct field, or function parameter); though // for the latter cases, the provided type may be another type // parameter. So: var _ List[byte] = []byte{} // A generic binary tree might be declared as follows. type Tree[E any] struct { left, right *Tree[E] payload E } // A simple instantiation of Tree: var root1 Tree[int] // The actual type parameter provided may be a generic type itself: var root2 Tree[List[int]] // A couple of more complex examples. // We don't need extra parentheses around the element type of the slices on // the right (unlike when we use ()'s rather than []'s for type parameters). var _ List[List[int]] = []List[int]{} var _ List[List[List[Tree[int]]]] = []List[List[Tree[int]]]{} // Type parameters act like type aliases when used in generic types // in the sense that we can "emulate" a specific type instantiation // with type aliases. type T1[P any] struct { f P } type T2[P any] struct { f struct { g P } } var x1 T1[struct{ g int }] var x2 T2[int] func _() { // This assignment is invalid because the types of x1, x2 are T1(...) // and T2(...) respectively, which are two different defined types. x1 = x2 // ERROR assignment // This assignment is valid because the types of x1.f and x2.f are // both struct { g int }; the type parameters act like type aliases // and their actual names don't come into play here. x1.f = x2.f } // We can verify this behavior using type aliases instead: type T1a struct { f A1 } type A1 = struct { g int } type T2a struct { f struct { g A2 } } type A2 = int var x1a T1a var x2a T2a func _() { x1a = x2a // ERROR assignment x1a.f = x2a.f } // Another interesting corner case are generic types that don't use // their type arguments. For instance: type T[P any] struct{} var xint T[int] var xbool T[bool] // Are these two variables of the same type? After all, their underlying // types are identical. We consider them to be different because each type // instantiation creates a new named type, in this case T and T // even if their underlying types are identical. This is sensible because // we might still have methods that have different signatures or behave // differently depending on the type arguments, and thus we can't possibly // consider such types identical. Consequently: func _() { xint = xbool // ERROR assignment } // Generic types cannot be used without instantiation. var _ T // ERROR cannot use generic type T // In type context, generic (parameterized) types cannot be parenthesized before // being instantiated. See also NOTES entry from 12/4/2019. var _ (T /* ERROR cannot use generic type T */ )[ /* ERROR unexpected \[ */ int] // All types may be parameterized, including interfaces. type I1[T any] interface{ m1(T) } // There is no such thing as a variadic generic type. type _[T ... /* ERROR invalid use of ... */ interface{}] struct{} // Generic interfaces may be embedded as one would expect. type I2 interface { I1(int) // method! I1[string] // embedded I1 } func _() { var x I2 x.I1(0) x.m1("foo") } type I0 interface { m0() } type I3 interface { I0 I1[bool] m(string) } func _() { var x I3 x.m0() x.m1(true) x.m("foo") } type _ struct { ( /* ERROR cannot parenthesize */ int8) ( /* ERROR cannot parenthesize */ *int16) *( /* ERROR cannot parenthesize */ int32) List[int] int8 /* ERROR int8 redeclared */ * /* ERROR int16 redeclared */ int16 List /* ERROR List redeclared */ [int] } // Issue #45639: We don't allow this anymore. Keep this code // in case we decide to revisit this decision. // // It's possible to declare local types whose underlying types // are type parameters. As with ordinary type definitions, the // types underlying properties are "inherited" but the methods // are not. // func _[T interface{ m(); ~int }]() { // type L T // var x L // // // m is not defined on L (it is not "inherited" from // // its underlying type). // x.m /* ERROR x.m undefined */ () // // // But the properties of T, such that as that it supports // // the operations of the types given by its type bound, // // are also the properties of L. // x++ // _ = x - x // // // On the other hand, if we define a local alias for T, // // that alias stands for T as expected. // type A = T // var y A // y.m() // _ = y < 0 // } // It is not permitted to declare a local type whose underlying // type is a type parameters not declared by that type declaration. func _[T any]() { type _ T // ERROR cannot use function type parameter T as RHS in type declaration type _ [_ any] T // ERROR cannot use function type parameter T as RHS in type declaration } // As a special case, an explicit type argument may be omitted // from a type parameter bound if the type bound expects exactly // one type argument. In that case, the type argument is the // respective type parameter to which the type bound applies. // Note: We may not permit this syntactic sugar at first. // Note: This is now disabled. All examples below are adjusted. type Adder[T any] interface { Add(T) T } // We don't need to explicitly instantiate the Adder bound // if we have exactly one type parameter. func Sum[T Adder[T]](list []T) T { var sum T for _, x := range list { sum = sum.Add(x) } return sum } // Valid and invalid variations. type B0 interface {} type B1[_ any] interface{} type B2[_, _ any] interface{} func _[T1 B0]() func _[T1 B1[T1]]() func _[T1 B2 /* ERROR cannot use generic type .* without instantiation */ ]() func _[T1, T2 B0]() func _[T1 B1[T1], T2 B1[T2]]() func _[T1, T2 B2 /* ERROR cannot use generic type .* without instantiation */ ]() func _[T1 B0, T2 B1[T2]]() // here B1 applies to T2 // When the type argument is left away, the type bound is // instantiated for each type parameter with that type // parameter. // Note: We may not permit this syntactic sugar at first. func _[A Adder[A], B Adder[B], C Adder[A]]() { var a A // A's type bound is Adder[A] a = a.Add(a) var b B // B's type bound is Adder[B] b = b.Add(b) var c C // C's type bound is Adder[A] a = c.Add(a) } // The type of variables (incl. parameters and return values) cannot // be an interface with type constraints or be/embed comparable. type I interface { ~int } var ( _ interface /* ERROR contains type constraints */ {~int} _ I /* ERROR contains type constraints */ ) func _(I /* ERROR contains type constraints */ ) func _(x, y, z I /* ERROR contains type constraints */ ) func _() I /* ERROR contains type constraints */ func _() { var _ I /* ERROR contains type constraints */ } type C interface { comparable } var _ comparable /* ERROR comparable */ var _ C /* ERROR comparable */ func _(_ comparable /* ERROR comparable */ , _ C /* ERROR comparable */ ) func _() { var _ comparable /* ERROR comparable */ var _ C /* ERROR comparable */ } // Type parameters are never const types, i.e., it's // not possible to declare a constant of type parameter type. // (If a type list contains just a single const type, we could // allow it, but such type lists don't make much sense in the // first place.) func _[T interface{~int|~float64}]() { // not valid const _ = T /* ERROR not constant */ (0) const _ T /* ERROR invalid constant type T */ = 1 // valid var _ = T(0) var _ T = 1 _ = T(0) }