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-rw-r--r--exercises/51_values.zig16
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/exercises/51_values.zig b/exercises/51_values.zig
index fea371b..7fb1ffb 100644
--- a/exercises/51_values.zig
+++ b/exercises/51_values.zig
@@ -85,9 +85,9 @@ pub fn main() void {
// Now let's circle back around to that "std" struct we imported
// at the top. Since it's just a regular Zig value once it's
- // imported, we can also assign new names for its fields. The
- // "debug" field refers to another struct. And "print" is a public
- // function namespaced within THAT struct.
+ // imported, we can also assign new names for its fields and
+ // declarations. "debug" refers to another struct and "print" is a
+ // public function namespaced within THAT struct.
//
// Let's assign the std.debug.print function to a const named
// "print" so that we can use this new name later!
@@ -131,13 +131,21 @@ pub fn main() void {
// "glorp_access3" is interesting. It's also a pointer, but it's a
// const. Won't that disallow changing the gold value? No! As you
// may recall from our earlier pointer experiments, a constant
- // pointer can't change what it's pointing AT, but the value at
+ // pointer can't change what it's POINTING AT, but the value at
// the address it points to is still mutable! So we CAN change it.
const glorp_access3: *Character = &glorp;
glorp_access3.gold = 333;
print("3:{}!. ", .{glorp.gold == glorp_access3.gold});
+ // NOTE:
+ //
+ // If we tried to do this with a *const Character pointer,
+ // that would NOT work because that makes the data we would
+ // get a compiler error because the VALUE becomes immutable!
+ //
+ // Moving along...
+ //
// Passing arguments to functions is pretty much exactly like
// making an assignment to a const (since Zig enforces that ALL
// function parameters are const).