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Source file src/cmp/cmp.go

Documentation: cmp

     1  // Copyright 2023 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
     2  // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
     3  // license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
     4  
     5  // Package cmp provides types and functions related to comparing
     6  // ordered values.
     7  package cmp
     8  
     9  // Ordered is a constraint that permits any ordered type: any type
    10  // that supports the operators < <= >= >.
    11  // If future releases of Go add new ordered types,
    12  // this constraint will be modified to include them.
    13  //
    14  // Note that floating-point types may contain NaN ("not-a-number") values.
    15  // An operator such as == or < will always report false when
    16  // comparing a NaN value with any other value, NaN or not.
    17  // See the [Compare] function for a consistent way to compare NaN values.
    18  type Ordered interface {
    19  	~int | ~int8 | ~int16 | ~int32 | ~int64 |
    20  		~uint | ~uint8 | ~uint16 | ~uint32 | ~uint64 | ~uintptr |
    21  		~float32 | ~float64 |
    22  		~string
    23  }
    24  
    25  // Less reports whether x is less than y.
    26  // For floating-point types, a NaN is considered less than any non-NaN,
    27  // and -0.0 is not less than (is equal to) 0.0.
    28  func Less[T Ordered](x, y T) bool {
    29  	return (isNaN(x) && !isNaN(y)) || x < y
    30  }
    31  
    32  // Compare returns
    33  //
    34  //	-1 if x is less than y,
    35  //	 0 if x equals y,
    36  //	+1 if x is greater than y.
    37  //
    38  // For floating-point types, a NaN is considered less than any non-NaN,
    39  // a NaN is considered equal to a NaN, and -0.0 is equal to 0.0.
    40  func Compare[T Ordered](x, y T) int {
    41  	xNaN := isNaN(x)
    42  	yNaN := isNaN(y)
    43  	if xNaN {
    44  		if yNaN {
    45  			return 0
    46  		}
    47  		return -1
    48  	}
    49  	if yNaN {
    50  		return +1
    51  	}
    52  	if x < y {
    53  		return -1
    54  	}
    55  	if x > y {
    56  		return +1
    57  	}
    58  	return 0
    59  }
    60  
    61  // isNaN reports whether x is a NaN without requiring the math package.
    62  // This will always return false if T is not floating-point.
    63  func isNaN[T Ordered](x T) bool {
    64  	return x != x
    65  }
    66  
    67  // Or returns the first of its arguments that is not equal to the zero value.
    68  // If no argument is non-zero, it returns the zero value.
    69  func Or[T comparable](vals ...T) T {
    70  	var zero T
    71  	for _, val := range vals {
    72  		if val != zero {
    73  			return val
    74  		}
    75  	}
    76  	return zero
    77  }
    78  

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