Search Options

Results per page
Sort
Preferred Languages
Advance

Results 1 - 4 of 4 for precedence (0.55 sec)

  1. doc/go1.22.html

      as in <code>/exact/match/{$}</code>.
    </p>
    
    <p>
      If two patterns overlap in the requests that they match, then the more specific pattern takes precedence.
      If neither is more specific, the patterns conflict.
      This rule generalizes the original precedence rules and maintains the property that the order in which
      patterns are registered does not matter.
    </p>
    
    <p>
    HTML
    - Registered: Tue Feb 06 11:13:10 GMT 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Jan 31 20:51:56 GMT 2024
    - 45.6K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  2. doc/go1.17_spec.html

    </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>
    There are five precedence levels for binary operators.
    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)
  3. doc/asm.html

    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&amp;1&lt;&lt;2</code> is 4, not 0—it parses as <code>(3&amp;1)&lt;&lt;2</code>
    not <code>3&amp;(1&lt;&lt;2)</code>.
    Also, constants are always evaluated as 64-bit unsigned integers.
    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)
  4. doc/go_spec.html

    </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>
    There are five precedence levels for binary operators.
    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)
Back to top