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private type with exported fields

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-12 06:22 出处:网络
In day 2 of the go tutorial there is this exercise: Why may it be useful to have a private type with exported fields?

In day 2 of the go tutorial there is this exercise:

Why may it be useful to have a private type with exported fields?

For example:

package geometry

type point struct {
    X, Y int;
    name string;
}

N开发者_JS百科otice that point is lowercase and thus not exported, whereas the fields X and Y are uppercase and thus are. It seems to me, that in order to have access to one of the exported fields, you would have to be able to write something like.

p.X

But in order for that to be possible, p would have to have a declaration like such:

var p geomitry.point;

or

p := new(geomitry.point);

This however is not possible (afaik), since the type declaration for point isn't exported.


But you could have a public constructor, right?

So if you had a NewGeometryPoint func defined, then you maybe could do (haven't tested against the compiler)

p := NewGeometryPoint(640,480);
fmt.Println("X:",p.X, "Y:",p.Y);


An abstract base type ?

package geometry

type point struct {
    X, Y int;
}

type Point struct {
    point;
    name string;
}

type Rect struct {
    P1, P2 point;
    name string;
}


When using the JSON package (http://golang.org/pkg/json/). You need to have exported fields, to pass a type to json.Marshal(), but you might not want to have that type publicly available to other external packages.


This same question is presented in this Go course as:

[...]You may even have a private type with exported fields. Exercise: when is that useful?

As presented here you can access externally an element defined as internal to a package, you just can't access it directly. In the case of the structure "point" in your example, it means you CANNOT access elements of point directly, as in


// geometry.go

package geometry

type point struct {
    X, Y int
}

// main.go

package main

import (
    "fmt"    
    "./geometry"
)

func main() {
    point := geometry.point{
        X: 10,
        Y: 20
    }

    fmt.Printf("Point: %#v\n", point)
}

But you CAN use the defined point to export elements that use its exported internal elements, as in


// geometry.go

package geometry

type point struct {
    X, Y int
}

//Vector ...
type Vector struct {
    Start point
    End   point
}

// main.go

package main

import (
    "fmt"

    "./geometry"
)

func main() {
    vector := geometry.Vector{}
    vector.Start.X = 10
    vector.Start.Y = 10
    vector.End.X = 10
    vector.End.Y = 10

    fmt.Printf("Vector: %#v\n", vector)
}

Result -> Vector: geometry.Vector{Start:geometry.point{X:10, Y:10}, End:geometry.point{X:10, Y:10}}


So, in my view, this mechanism is meant to give you flexibility in declaring internal data structures.

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