Mastering Go Slices: A Hands-on

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Introduction

The Slices lab is designed to test your knowledge of the slice data type in Go. Slices are a more powerful interface to sequences than arrays, and this lab will help you understand how to use them.


Skills Graph

%%%%{init: {'theme':'neutral'}}%%%% flowchart RL go(("`Go`")) -.-> go/DataTypesandStructuresGroup(["`Data Types and Structures`"]) go/DataTypesandStructuresGroup -.-> go/slices("`Slices`") subgraph Lab Skills go/slices -.-> lab-15506{{"`Mastering Go Slices: A Hands-on`"}} end

Slices

The problem to be solved in this lab is to create and manipulate slices in Go. You will need to create an empty slice with non-zero length, set and get values in the slice, use the len function to get the length of the slice, use the append function to add new values to the slice, use the copy function to copy a slice, and use the slice operator to get a slice of elements from an existing slice.

To complete this lab, you will need to have a basic understanding of Go syntax and the slice data type. You will also need to be familiar with the make, append, and copy functions, as well as the slice operator.

## Note that while slices are different types than arrays,
## they are rendered similarly by `fmt.Println`.
$ go run slices.go
emp: [ ]
set: [a b c]
get: c
len: 3
apd: [a b c d e f]
cpy: [a b c d e f]
sl1: [c d e]
sl2: [a b c d e]
sl3: [c d e f]
dcl: [g h i]
2d: [[0] [1 2] [2 3 4]]

## Check out this [great blog post](https://go.dev/blog/slices-intro)
## by the Go team for more details on the design and
## implementation of slices in Go.

## Now that we've seen arrays and slices we'll look at
## Go's other key builtin data structure: maps.

There is the full code below:

// _Slices_ are an important data type in Go, giving
// a more powerful interface to sequences than arrays.

package main

import "fmt"

func main() {

	// Unlike arrays, slices are typed only by the
	// elements they contain (not the number of elements).
	// To create an empty slice with non-zero length, use
	// the builtin `make`. Here we make a slice of
	// `string`s of length `3` (initially zero-valued).
	s := make([]string, 3)
	fmt.Println("emp:", s)

	// We can set and get just like with arrays.
	s[0] = "a"
	s[1] = "b"
	s[2] = "c"
	fmt.Println("set:", s)
	fmt.Println("get:", s[2])

	// `len` returns the length of the slice as expected.
	fmt.Println("len:", len(s))

	// In addition to these basic operations, slices
	// support several more that make them richer than
	// arrays. One is the builtin `append`, which
	// returns a slice containing one or more new values.
	// Note that we need to accept a return value from
	// `append` as we may get a new slice value.
	s = append(s, "d")
	s = append(s, "e", "f")
	fmt.Println("apd:", s)

	// Slices can also be `copy`'d. Here we create an
	// empty slice `c` of the same length as `s` and copy
	// into `c` from `s`.
	c := make([]string, len(s))
	copy(c, s)
	fmt.Println("cpy:", c)

	// Slices support a "slice" operator with the syntax
	// `slice[low:high]`. For example, this gets a slice
	// of the elements `s[2]`, `s[3]`, and `s[4]`.
	l := s[2:5]
	fmt.Println("sl1:", l)

	// This slices up to (but excluding) `s[5]`.
	l = s[:5]
	fmt.Println("sl2:", l)

	// And this slices up from (and including) `s[2]`.
	l = s[2:]
	fmt.Println("sl3:", l)

	// We can declare and initialize a variable for slice
	// in a single line as well.
	t := []string{"g", "h", "i"}
	fmt.Println("dcl:", t)

	// Slices can be composed into multi-dimensional data
	// structures. The length of the inner slices can
	// vary, unlike with multi-dimensional arrays.
	twoD := make([][]int, 3)
	for i := 0; i < 3; i++ {
		innerLen := i + 1
		twoD[i] = make([]int, innerLen)
		for j := 0; j < innerLen; j++ {
			twoD[i][j] = i + j
		}
	}
	fmt.Println("2d: ", twoD)
}

Summary

The Slices lab is designed to test your knowledge of the slice data type in Go. By completing this lab, you will gain a better understanding of how to create and manipulate slices in Go, including how to set and get values in a slice, use the len function, use the append and copy functions, and use the slice operator.

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