bytes, strings: add cross-references in docstrings

For newly funcs SplitSeq, SplitAfterSeq, FieldsSeq, FieldsFuncSeq.

Updates #61901.

Change-Id: I3c97bfd9c2250de68aaea348c82a05635ee797af
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/637176
Auto-Submit: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com>
LUCI-TryBot-Result: Go LUCI <golang-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com>
This commit is contained in:
Oleksandr Redko 2024-12-17 19:05:23 +02:00 committed by Gopher Robot
parent e977b83b32
commit b057b8872d
2 changed files with 10 additions and 10 deletions

View file

@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ func splitSeq(s, sep []byte, sepSave int) iter.Seq[[]byte] {
}
// SplitSeq returns an iterator over all substrings of s separated by sep.
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by Split(s, sep),
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by [Split](s, sep),
// but without constructing the slice.
// It returns a single-use iterator.
func SplitSeq(s, sep []byte) iter.Seq[[]byte] {
@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ func SplitSeq(s, sep []byte) iter.Seq[[]byte] {
}
// SplitAfterSeq returns an iterator over substrings of s split after each instance of sep.
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by SplitAfter(s, sep),
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by [SplitAfter](s, sep),
// but without constructing the slice.
// It returns a single-use iterator.
func SplitAfterSeq(s, sep []byte) iter.Seq[[]byte] {
@ -84,8 +84,8 @@ func SplitAfterSeq(s, sep []byte) iter.Seq[[]byte] {
}
// FieldsSeq returns an iterator over substrings of s split around runs of
// whitespace characters, as defined by unicode.IsSpace.
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by Fields(s),
// whitespace characters, as defined by [unicode.IsSpace].
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by [Fields](s),
// but without constructing the slice.
func FieldsSeq(s []byte) iter.Seq[[]byte] {
return func(yield func([]byte) bool) {
@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ func FieldsSeq(s []byte) iter.Seq[[]byte] {
// FieldsFuncSeq returns an iterator over substrings of s split around runs of
// Unicode code points satisfying f(c).
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by FieldsFunc(s),
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by [FieldsFunc](s),
// but without constructing the slice.
func FieldsFuncSeq(s []byte, f func(rune) bool) iter.Seq[[]byte] {
return func(yield func([]byte) bool) {

View file

@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ func splitSeq(s, sep string, sepSave int) iter.Seq[string] {
}
// SplitSeq returns an iterator over all substrings of s separated by sep.
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by Split(s, sep),
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by [Split](s, sep),
// but without constructing the slice.
// It returns a single-use iterator.
func SplitSeq(s, sep string) iter.Seq[string] {
@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ func SplitSeq(s, sep string) iter.Seq[string] {
}
// SplitAfterSeq returns an iterator over substrings of s split after each instance of sep.
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by SplitAfter(s, sep),
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by [SplitAfter](s, sep),
// but without constructing the slice.
// It returns a single-use iterator.
func SplitAfterSeq(s, sep string) iter.Seq[string] {
@ -84,8 +84,8 @@ func SplitAfterSeq(s, sep string) iter.Seq[string] {
}
// FieldsSeq returns an iterator over substrings of s split around runs of
// whitespace characters, as defined by unicode.IsSpace.
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by Fields(s),
// whitespace characters, as defined by [unicode.IsSpace].
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by [Fields](s),
// but without constructing the slice.
func FieldsSeq(s string) iter.Seq[string] {
return func(yield func(string) bool) {
@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ func FieldsSeq(s string) iter.Seq[string] {
// FieldsFuncSeq returns an iterator over substrings of s split around runs of
// Unicode code points satisfying f(c).
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by FieldsFunc(s),
// The iterator yields the same strings that would be returned by [FieldsFunc](s),
// but without constructing the slice.
func FieldsFuncSeq(s string, f func(rune) bool) iter.Seq[string] {
return func(yield func(string) bool) {