The strings.Join
function takes slices of strings only:
s := []string{"foo", "bar", "baz"}
fmt.Println(strings.Join(s, ", "))
But it would be nice to be able to pass arbitrary objects which implement a ToString()
function.
type ToStringConverter interface {
ToString() string
}
Is there something like this in Go or do I have to decorate existing types like int
with ToString methods and write a wrapper around strings.Join
?
func Join(a []ToStringConverter, sep string) string
Attach a String() string
method to any named type and enjoy any custom "ToString" functionality:
package main
import "fmt"
type bin int
func (b bin) String() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("%b", b)
}
func main() {
fmt.Println(bin(42))
}
Playground: http://play.golang.org/p/Azql7_pDAA
Output
101010
When you have own struct
, you could have own convert-to-string function.
package main
import (
"fmt"
)
type Color struct {
Red int `json:"red"`
Green int `json:"green"`
Blue int `json:"blue"`
}
func (c Color) String() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("[%d, %d, %d]", c.Red, c.Green, c.Blue)
}
func main() {
c := Color{Red: 123, Green: 11, Blue: 34}
fmt.Println(c) //[123, 11, 34]
}
Another example with a struct :
package types
import "fmt"
type MyType struct {
Id int
Name string
}
func (t MyType) String() string {
return fmt.Sprintf(
"[%d : %s]",
t.Id,
t.Name)
}
Be careful when using it,
concatenation with '+' doesn't compile :
t := types.MyType{ 12, "Blabla" }
fmt.Println(t) // OK
fmt.Printf("t : %s \n", t) // OK
//fmt.Println("t : " + t) // Compiler error !!!
fmt.Println("t : " + t.String()) // OK if calling the function explicitly
package main
import "fmt"
type Person struct {
fname, sname string
address string
}
func (p *Person) String() string {
s:= fmt.Sprintf("\n %s %s lives at %s \n", p.fname, p.sname, p.address)
return s
}
func main(){
alex := &Person{"Alex", "Smith", "33 McArthur Bvd"}
fmt.Println(alex)
}
Output:
Alex Smith lives at 33 McArthur Bvd
If you have a fixed set of possible types for elements that could be converted, then you can define conversion functions for each, and a general conversion function that uses reflection to test the actual type of an element and call the relevant function for that element, eg:
func ToStringint(x int) string {
return strconv.Itoa(x)
}
func ToStringlong(x int64) string {
return strconv.FormatInt(x,10)
}
func ToStringdouble(x float64) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("%f", x)
}
func ToStringboolean(x bool) string {
if x {
return "true"
}
return "false"
}
func ToStringOclAny(x interface{}) string {
if reflect.TypeOf(x) == TYPEint {
return strconv.Itoa(x.(int))
}
if reflect.TypeOf(x) == TYPEdouble {
return fmt.Sprintf("%f", x.(float64))
}
if reflect.TypeOf(x) == TYPElong {
return strconv.FormatInt(x.(int64),10)
}
if reflect.TypeOf(x) == TYPEString {
return x.(string)
}
if reflect.TypeOf(x) == TYPEboolean {
return ToStringboolean(x.(bool))
}
if reflect.TypeOf(x) == TYPESequence {
return ToStringSequence(x.(*list.List))
}
if reflect.TypeOf(x) == TYPEMap {
return ToStringMap(x.(map[interface{}]interface{}))
}
return ""
}
func ToStringSequence(col *list.List) string {
res := "Sequence{"
for e := col.Front(); e != nil; e = e.Next() {
res = res + ToStringOclAny(e.Value)
if e.Next() != nil {
res = res + ", "
}
}
return res + "}"
}
func ToStringSet(col *list.List) string {
res := "Set{"
for e := col.Front(); e != nil; e = e.Next() {
res = res + ToStringOclAny(e.Value)
if e.Next() != nil {
res = res + ", "
}
}
return res + "}"
}
func ToStringMap(m map[interface{}]interface{}) string {
res := "Map{"
for i, v := range m {
res = res + ToStringOclAny(i) + " |-> " + ToStringOclAny(v) + " "
}
return res + "}"
}
Here is a simple way to handle this:
package main
import (
"fat"
"strconv"
)
type Person struct {
firstName, lastName string
age int
}
func (p Person) GetFullName() string {
return p.firstName + " " + p.lastName
}
func (p Person) GetAge() int {
return p.age
}
func (p Person) GetAgeAsString() string {
return strconv.Itoa(p.age)
}
func main() {
p := Person {"John", "Doe", 21}
fmt.Println(p.GetFullName())
fmt.Println(p.GetAgeAsString())
}
Output:
"John Doe"
"21"
I prefer something like the following:
type StringRef []byte
func (s StringRef) String() string {
return string(s[:])
}
…
// rather silly example, but ...
fmt.Printf("foo=%s\n",StringRef("bar"))
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