I am writing a function to reverse a string using Go.
func main() {
s := "abcde"
r := []rune(s)
for i, j := 0, len(s)-1; i < j; i, j = i++, j-- {
r[i], r[j] = r[j], r[i]
}
fmt.Printf("%s
", string(r))
}
However, the compiler complaints about i, j = i++, j--
, says, syntax error: unexpected ++, expecting {
.
This function works if i change that into i, j = i+1, j-1
. I don't know why this isn't allowed. Anyone can help? Thank u.
In Go, x--
and x++
are statements, not expressions, so you can't assign them like that, and it's by design.
The Spec says:
Unary operators have the highest precedence. As the ++ and -- operators form statements, not expressions, they fall outside the operator hierarchy. As a consequence, statement *p++ is the same as (*p)++.