Reputation: 31
I'm developing in Go and I run the following for loop:
// Define Initial Value
i := 0
for {
// Get random data based on iteration
data, i := GiveRandomData(i)
// Save to database
response, err := SaveToDatabase(data)
if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) }
fmt.Println(response)
}
However, when compiling this program, I get the following error:
.\main.go:26: i declared and not used
The Go compiler doesn't seem to recognise that the i
variable is given back to the function in the next loop. Inside this function, the I
variable changes value.
What should I do to get rid of this compilation error or to let Go understand that this variable is not unused, but used in the next iteration of this endless for loop?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 2765
Reputation: 224942
The Go compiler doesn't seem to recognise that the
i
variable is given back to the function in the next loop. Inside this function, theI
variable changes value.
No, i
does not change value; :=
declares a new i
. (Go allows you to do this because data
is also new.) To assign to it instead, you’ll need to declare data
separately:
var data RandomDataType
data, i = GiveRandomData(i)
Or give the new i
a temporary name:
data, next := GiveRandomData(i)
i = next
Upvotes: 9