- Sort Score
- Result 10 results
- Languages All
Results 1 - 3 of 3 for typo (0.18 sec)
-
doc/go1.17_spec.html
the corresponding underlying type is <code>T</code> itself. Otherwise, <code>T</code>'s underlying type is the underlying type of the type to which <code>T</code> refers in its <a href="#Type_declarations">type declaration</a>. </p> <pre> type ( A1 = string A2 = A1 ) type ( B1 string B2 B1 B3 []B1 B4 B3 ) </pre> <p>
HTML - Registered: Tue May 07 11:14:38 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Thu Apr 11 20:22:45 GMT 2024 - 211.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
doc/go_mem.html
in an unspecified order. This means that races on multiword data structures can lead to inconsistent values not corresponding to a single write. When the values depend on the consistency of internal (pointer, length) or (pointer, type) pairs, as can be the case for interface values, maps, slices, and strings in most Go implementations, such races can in turn lead to arbitrary memory corruption. </p> <p>
HTML - Registered: Tue May 07 11:14:38 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Mon Mar 04 15:54:42 GMT 2024 - 26.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
doc/go_spec.html
to those values. A type may be denoted by a <i>type name</i>, if it has one, which must be followed by <a href="#Instantiations">type arguments</a> if the type is generic. A type may also be specified using a <i>type literal</i>, which composes a type from existing types. </p> <pre class="ebnf"> Type = TypeName [ TypeArgs ] | TypeLit | "(" Type ")" . TypeName = identifier | QualifiedIdent .
HTML - Registered: Tue May 07 11:14:38 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Thu May 02 22:43:51 GMT 2024 - 279.6K bytes - Viewed (0)