I just started learning Go and I got confused with one example about using defer to change named return value in the The Go Blog - Defer, Panic, and Recover.
The example says:
- Deferred functions may read and assign to the returning function's named return values.
In this example, a deferred function increments the return value i after the surrounding function returns. Thus, this function returns 2:
func c() (i int) {
defer func() { i++ }()
return 1
}
But as what I have learned from A Tour of Go - Named return values
A return statement without arguments returns the named return values. This is known as a "naked" return.
I tested in the following code and in function b
it returns 1 because it wasn't the "A return statement without arguments" case mentioned above.
func a() (i int) { // return 2
i = 2
return
}
func b() (i int) { // return 1
i = 2
return 1
}
So my question is in the first example, the surrounding function c has a named return value i, but the function c
uses return 1
which in the second example we can see it should have return 1 no matter what value i
is. But why after i
changes in the deferred function the c
function returns the value of i
instead the value 1?
As I was typing my question, I might have guessed the answer. Is it because:
return 1
is equals to:
i = 1
return
in a function with a named return value variable i
?
Please help me confirm, thanks!
question from:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37248898/how-does-defer-and-named-return-value-work 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…