package cmp
import "cmp"
Package cmp provides types and functions related to comparing ordered values.
Index
Examples
Functions
func Compare
func Compare[T Ordered](x, y T) int
Compare returns
-1 if x is less than y, 0 if x equals y, +1 if x is greater than y.
For floating-point types, a NaN is considered less than any non-NaN, a NaN is considered equal to a NaN, and -0.0 is equal to 0.0.
func Less
func Less[T Ordered](x, y T) bool
Less reports whether x is less than y. For floating-point types, a NaN is considered less than any non-NaN, and -0.0 is not less than (is equal to) 0.0.
func Or
func Or[T comparable](vals ...T) T
Or returns the first of its arguments that is not equal to the zero value.
If no argument is non-zero, it returns the zero value.
Output: Output:Example
package main
import (
"cmp"
"fmt"
)
func main() {
// Suppose we have some user input
// that may or may not be an empty string
userInput1 := ""
userInput2 := "some text"
fmt.Println(cmp.Or(userInput1, "default"))
fmt.Println(cmp.Or(userInput2, "default"))
fmt.Println(cmp.Or(userInput1, userInput2, "default"))
}
default
some text
some text
Example (Sort)
package main
import (
"cmp"
"fmt"
"slices"
)
func main() {
type Order struct {
Product string
Customer string
Price float64
}
orders := []Order{
{"foo", "alice", 1.00},
{"bar", "bob", 3.00},
{"baz", "carol", 4.00},
{"foo", "alice", 2.00},
{"bar", "carol", 1.00},
{"foo", "bob", 4.00},
}
// Sort by customer first, product second, and last by higher price
slices.SortFunc(orders, func(a, b Order) int {
return cmp.Or(
cmp.Compare(a.Customer, b.Customer),
cmp.Compare(a.Product, b.Product),
cmp.Compare(b.Price, a.Price),
)
})
for _, order := range orders {
fmt.Printf("%s %s %.2f\n", order.Product, order.Customer, order.Price)
}
}
foo alice 2.00
foo alice 1.00
bar bob 3.00
foo bob 4.00
bar carol 1.00
baz carol 4.00
Types
type Ordered
type Ordered interface { ~int | ~int8 | ~int16 | ~int32 | ~int64 | ~uint | ~uint8 | ~uint16 | ~uint32 | ~uint64 | ~uintptr | ~float32 | ~float64 | ~string }
Ordered is a constraint that permits any ordered type: any type that supports the operators < <= >= >. If future releases of Go add new ordered types, this constraint will be modified to include them.
Note that floating-point types may contain NaN ("not-a-number") values. An operator such as == or < will always report false when comparing a NaN value with any other value, NaN or not. See the Compare function for a consistent way to compare NaN values.