I found myself confused with the array and slice data types.
From Go docs, arrays are described as follows:
There are major differences between the ways arrays work in Go and C. In Go,
- Arrays are values. Assigning one array to another copies all the elements.
- In particular, if you pass an array to a function, it will receive a copy of the array, not a pointer to it.
- The size of an array is part of its type. The types [10]int and [20]int are distinct.
Functions:
As in all languages in the C family, everything in Go is passed by
value. That is, a function always gets a copy of the thing being
passed, as if there were an assignment statement assigning the value
to the parameter. For instance, passing an int value to a function
makes a copy of the int, and passing a pointer value makes a copy of
the pointer, but not the data it points to.
Why does sort.Ints(arrayValue) modify the passed variable when I declared it as an array, not as a slice?
Code
var av = []int{1,5,2,3,7}
fmt.Println(av)
sort.Ints(av)
fmt.Println(av)
return
Output
[1 5 2 3 7]
[1 2 3 5 7]
See “Slices: usage and internals“
That is a slice, not an array.
That explains why the sort function will modify the content of what is referenced by the slice.
As commented below by Kirk,
sort.Intswill give you an error if you passed it an array instead of a slice.