What is the difference between the =
and :=
operators, and what are the use cases for them? They both seem to be for an assignment?
9 Answers
Only =
is the assignment operator.
:=
is a part of the syntax of the Short variable declarations clause.
π There are some rules though. See this other answer for more details.
As others have explained already, :=
is for both declaration, assignment, and also for redeclaration; and it guesses (infers) the variable's type automatically.
For example, foo := 32
is a short-hand form of:
var foo int
foo = 32
// OR:
var foo int = 32
// OR:
var foo = 32
/* There are some rules: */
β 1st Rule:
You can't use :=
out of funcs
. It's because, out of any func, a statement should start with a keyword.
// no keywords below, illegal.
illegal := 42
// `var` keyword makes this statement legal.
var legal = 42
func foo() {
alsoLegal := 42
// reason: it's in a func scope.
}
β 2nd Rule:
You can't use them twice (in the same scope):
legal := 42
legal := 42 // <-- error
Because, :=
introduces "a new variable", hence using it twice does not redeclare a second variable, so it's illegal.
β 3rd Rule:
You can use them for multi-variable declarations and assignments:
foo, bar := 42, 314
jazz, bazz := 22, 7
β 4th Rule (Redeclaration):
You can use them twice in "multi-variable" declarations, if one of the variables is new:
foo, bar := someFunc()
foo, jazz := someFunc() // <-- jazz is new
baz, foo := someFunc() // <-- baz is new
This is legal, because, you're not declaring all the variables, you're just reassigning new values to the existing variables, and declaring new variables at the same time. This is called redeclaration.
β 5th Rule:
You can use the short declaration to declare a variable in a newer scope even that variable is already declared with the same name before:
var foo int = 34
func some() {
// because foo here is scoped to some func
foo := 42 // <-- legal
foo = 314 // <-- legal
}
Here, foo := 42
is legal, because, it declares foo
in some()
func's scope. foo = 314
is legal, because, it just assigns a new value to foo
.
β 6th Rule:
You can declare the same name in short statement blocks like: if, for, switch:
foo := 42
if foo := someFunc(); foo == 314 {
// foo is scoped to 314 here
// ...
}
// foo is still 42 here
Because, foo
in if foo := ...
, only belongs to that if
clause and it's in a different scope.
So, as a general rule: If you want to easily declare a variable you can use
:=
, or, if you only want to overwrite an existing variable, you can use=
.
References:
:=
is a short-hand for declaration.
a := 10
b := "gopher"
a
will be declared as an int
and initialized with value 10
where as b
will be declared as a string and initialized with value gopher
.
Their equivalents using =
would be
var a = 10
var b = "gopher"
=
is assignment operator. It is used the same way you would use it in any other language.
You can omit the type when you declare the variable and an initializer is present (http://tour.golang.org/#11).
from the reference doc : (tour.golang.org)
Inside a function, the :=
short assignment statement can be used in place of a var declaration with implicit type.
Outside a function, every construct begins with a keyword (var, func, and so on) and the := construct is not available.
Both are the different technique of variable declaration in Go language.
var firstName = "John" // is a variable declaration
AND
firstName := "John" // is a short variable declaration.
A short variable declaration is a shorthand for a regular variable declaration with initializer expressions but no types.
Read below for detail:
:=
use to do declaration and initialization at the same time, following is an example.
Usage of =
var i int
i = 10
https://play.golang.org/p/RU88ty_SGa
Usage of :=
i := 10
x := uint32(123)
works for example. It must be obvious for most people but I had to think a few minutes ;-) β Kenji Noguchi