I understand Rust being type safe, but Im seeing syntax that Ive never seen in my life in Go which looks too messy
var test int < bruh what?
:=
func(u User) hi () { … } Where is the return type and why calling this fct doesnt require passing the u parameter but rather u.hi().
map := map[string] int {} < wtf
Yea this is just syntax, every language does it a little different, most popular languages seem to derive off of C in some capacity. Some do it more different than others, and some are unholy conglomerations of unrelated languages that somehow works. Instead of saying why is this different, just ask how does this work. It’s made my life a lot simpler.
var test int
is justint test
in another language.func (u User) hi () { ... }
is justclass User { void hi() { ... } }
in another language (you can guess which language I’m referencing I bet).map := map[string]int {}
is justMap map = new HashMap<>()
in another (yes it’s java).Also RTFM, this is all explained, just different!
Edit: I also know this is a very reductive view of things and there are larger differences, I was mostly approaching this from a newer developers understanding of things and just “getting it to work”.
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