this post was submitted on 10 Feb 2024
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I've seen that a new "range-over-func" experiment is available with Go 1.22. In this article, I took a closer look and evaluated the feature for myself.

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[–] icb4dc0de@programming.dev 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I can imagine how…exhausting these discussions were 😅

Apart from the more synthetic examples and the obvious things like iterating custom containers - I understand your argument that this is not a every day use case but there are certainly some use cases - there are things like:

  • iterating a bufio.Scanner
  • iterating SQL results
  • streaming chunked HTTP results

That can benefit from the range-over-func approach.

Furthermore there’s another “class” of tasks that are quite a good fit: generators 😍 Think of an infinite slice of random numbers or Fibonacci numbers or prime numbers…all of this can be expressed as a function you can iterate and “just stop” as soon as you have enough.

Probably this gives you an idea what else the whole experiment is good for 😉

Edit: there’s for instance a Python library letting you generate the holidays of a state for the next 1000 years based on some algorithm without having the data pre-calculated/stored anywhere but you can iterate/filter/… whatever you want