patterngoCritical
When does the init() function run?
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runfunctiontheinitdoeswhen
Problem
I've tried to find a precise explanation of what the
And finally means finally: init is called after all the variable declarations in the package have evaluated their initializers, and those are evaluated only after all the imported packages have been initialized.
What does
I also read Mark Summerfield's go book the following:
If a package has one or more init() functions they are automatically executed before the main package's main() function is called.
In my understanding,
init() function does in Go. I read what Effective Go says but I was unsure if I understood fully what it said. The exact sentence I am unsure is the following:And finally means finally: init is called after all the variable declarations in the package have evaluated their initializers, and those are evaluated only after all the imported packages have been initialized.
What does
all the variable declarations in the package have evaluated their initializers mean? Does it mean if you declare "global" variables in a package and its files, init() will not run until all of it is evaluated and then it will run all the init function and then main() when ./main_file_name is ran?I also read Mark Summerfield's go book the following:
If a package has one or more init() functions they are automatically executed before the main package's main() function is called.
In my understanding,
init() is only relevant when you intend to run main() right? Anyone understands more precisely init() feel free to correct meSolution
Yes assuming you have this:
Keep in mind that
Additionally, you can have multiple
It seems that
A lot of the internal Go packages use
var WhatIsThe = AnswerToLife()
func AnswerToLife() int { // 1
return 42
}
func init() { // 2
WhatIsThe = 0
}
func main() { // 3
if WhatIsThe == 0 {
fmt.Println("It's all a lie.")
}
}AnswerToLife() is guaranteed to run before init() is called, and init() is guaranteed to run before main() is called.Keep in mind that
init() is always called, regardless if there's main or not, so if you import a package that has an init function, it will be executed.Additionally, you can have multiple
init() functions per package; they will be executed in the order they show up in the file (after all variables are initialized of course). If they span multiple files, they will be executed in lexical file name order (as pointed out by @benc):It seems that
init() functions are executed in lexical file name order. The Go spec says "build systems are encouraged to present multiple files belonging to the same package in lexical file name order to a compiler". It seems that go build works this way.A lot of the internal Go packages use
init() to initialize tables and such, for example https://github.com/golang/go/blob/883bc6/src/compress/bzip2/bzip2.go#L480Code Snippets
var WhatIsThe = AnswerToLife()
func AnswerToLife() int { // 1
return 42
}
func init() { // 2
WhatIsThe = 0
}
func main() { // 3
if WhatIsThe == 0 {
fmt.Println("It's all a lie.")
}
}Context
Stack Overflow Q#24790175, score: 660
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