- Sort Score
- Result 10 results
- Languages All
Results 1 - 3 of 3 for Operator (0.21 sec)
-
doc/go1.17_spec.html
var bb = make([]byte, 1.0<<s) // 1.0 has type int; len(bb) == 0 </pre> <h4 id="Operator_precedence">Operator precedence</h4> <p> Unary operators have the highest precedence. As the <code>++</code> and <code>--</code> operators form statements, not expressions, they fall outside the operator hierarchy. As a consequence, statement <code>*p++</code> is the same as <code>(*p)++</code>. </p> <p>
HTML - Registered: Tue Apr 30 11:13:12 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Thu Apr 11 20:22:45 GMT 2024 - 211.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
doc/asm.html
<p> Although the assembler takes its guidance from the Plan 9 assemblers, it is a distinct program, so there are some differences. One is in constant evaluation. Constant expressions in the assembler are parsed using Go's operator precedence, not the C-like precedence of the original. Thus <code>3&1<<2</code> is 4, not 0—it parses as <code>(3&1)<<2</code> not <code>3&(1<<2)</code>.
HTML - Registered: Tue Apr 30 11:13:12 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Nov 28 19:15:27 GMT 2023 - 36.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
doc/go_spec.html
var bb = make([]byte, 1.0<<s) // 1.0 has type int; len(bb) == 0 </pre> <h4 id="Operator_precedence">Operator precedence</h4> <p> Unary operators have the highest precedence. As the <code>++</code> and <code>--</code> operators form statements, not expressions, they fall outside the operator hierarchy. As a consequence, statement <code>*p++</code> is the same as <code>(*p)++</code>. </p> <p>
HTML - Registered: Tue Apr 30 11:13:12 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Fri Apr 26 00:39:16 GMT 2024 - 279.6K bytes - Viewed (0)