Security with Go
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if

The if statement comes with the if, else if, and else clauses, just like most other languages. The one interesting feature that Go has is the ability to put a statement before the condition, creating temporary variables that are discarded after the if statement has completed.

This example demonstrates the various ways to use an if statement:

package main

import (
"fmt"
"math/rand"
)

func main() {
x := rand.Int()

if x < 100 {
fmt.Println("x is less than 100.")
}

if x < 1000 {
fmt.Println("x is less than 1000.")
} else if x < 10000 {
fmt.Println("x is less than 10,000.")
} else {
fmt.Println("x is greater than 10,000")
}

fmt.Println("x:", x)

// You can put a statement before the condition // The variable scope of n is limited
if n := rand.Int(); n > 1000 {
fmt.Println("n is greater than 1000.")
fmt.Println("n:", n)
} else {
fmt.Println("n is not greater than 1000.")
fmt.Println("n:", n)
}
// n is no longer available past the if statement
}