// Copyright © 2018 Inanc Gumus // Learn Go Programming Course // License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ // // For more tutorials : https://learngoprogramming.com // In-person training : https://www.linkedin.com/in/inancgumus/ // Follow me on twitter: https://twitter.com/inancgumus package main import ( "fmt" s "github.com/inancgumus/prettyslice" ) func main() { // #1: received the raining probabilities data := []float64{10, 25, 30, 50} // #2: received new data // newData := []float64{80, 90} // for i := 0; i < len(newData); i++ { // data[i] = newData[i] // } // #3: use copy // copy(data, []float64{99, 100}) // #4: received more data than the original // copy(data, []float64{10, 5, 15, 0, 20}) // #5: returns the # of copied elements // n := copy(data, []float64{10, 5, 15, 0, 20}) // fmt.Printf("%d probabilities copied.\n", n) // #6: (sometimes) use append instead of copy // data = append(data[:0], []float64{10, 5, 15, 0, 20}...) // #7: clone a slice using copy // saved := make([]float64, len(data)) // copy(saved, data) // #9: clone a slice using append nil (I prefer this) // saved := append([]float64(nil), data...) // data[0] = 0 // #8 // s.Show("Probabilities (saved)", saved) // #7 // #1: print the probabilities s.Show("Probabilities (data)", data) fmt.Printf("Is it gonna rain? %.f%% chance.\n", (data[0]+data[1]+data[2]+data[3])/ float64(len(data))) }