I’ve seen that a new “range-over-func” experiment is available with Go 1.22. In this article, I took a closer look and evaluated the feature for myself.

  • codesoap@feddit.deOP
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    Maybe I’m a little tired. I’ve argued a lot about this on reddit as well and have become a bit frustrated with people telling me I’m missing things, without being able to actually provide any convincing real world examples. It’s not my goal to cause drama or offend anyone. Sorry, if I came across a little cranky.

    Thanks for linking some resources! I’ll take a look and see if I can find some compelling arguments there.

    • icb4dc0de@programming.dev
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      I can imagine how…exhausting these discussions were 😅

      Apart from the more synthetic examples and the obvious things like iterating custom containers - I understand your argument that this is not a every day use case but there are certainly some use cases - there are things like:

      • iterating a bufio.Scanner
      • iterating SQL results
      • streaming chunked HTTP results

      That can benefit from the range-over-func approach.

      Furthermore there’s another “class” of tasks that are quite a good fit: generators 😍 Think of an infinite slice of random numbers or Fibonacci numbers or prime numbers…all of this can be expressed as a function you can iterate and “just stop” as soon as you have enough.

      Probably this gives you an idea what else the whole experiment is good for 😉

      Edit: there’s for instance a Python library letting you generate the holidays of a state for the next 1000 years based on some algorithm without having the data pre-calculated/stored anywhere but you can iterate/filter/… whatever you want