13

This program does not compile:

package main

type Validator struct {
}

// Error implements error interface
func (v *Validator) Error() string {
    return ""
}

func test() error {
    return &Validator{}
}

func main() {
    switch test().(type) {
    case nil:
        println("No error")
    case Validator:
        println("Validation error")
        return
    default:
        println("Unknown error")
        return
    }
}

The error is:

prog.go:19: impossible type switch case: test() (type error) cannot have dynamic type Validator (missing Error method)

But Validator struct has method Error.

2 Answers 2

16

You have two different types, Validator and the pointer type *Validator, and these two types have different method sets.

You have only defined an Error() method for the pointer while Validator doesn't have this method.

What you can do is the following change:

// Error implements error interface
func (v Validator) Error() string {
    return ""
}

...

case *Validator, Validator: // You are actually getting a *Validator

This implements Error() for both Validator and *Validator. As the Go specification says:

The method set of any other type T consists of all methods declared with receiver type T. The method set of the corresponding pointer type *T is the set of all methods declared with receiver *T or T (that is, it also contains the method set of T)

3
  • Do you have any advice on when to define a method on a pointer to object or the object itself?
    – warvariuc
    Jul 6, 2014 at 8:36
  • 1
    Define the method on a pointer when 1. you need to modify the object. 2. it's a big object and copying it is expensive.
    – OneOfOne
    Jul 6, 2014 at 9:12
  • In this case Validator has a size of 0, so it's clearly better to use it than a pointer. Jul 6, 2014 at 9:48
8

The compiler is correct. Validator type does not implement Error, *Validator does. Validator and *Validator are different types. Just replace the former with the latter in the type switch:

switch test().(type) {
case nil:
    println("No error")
case *Validator:
    println("Validation error")
    return
default:
    println("Unknown error")
    return
}

Working example on the Go Playground: http://play.golang.org/p/aWqzPXweiA

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