16

Using Go’s ast package, I am looping over a struct’s field list like so:

type Thing struct {
    Field1 string
    Field2 []int
    Field3 map[byte]float64
}

// typ is a *ast.StructType representing the above   
for _, fld := range typ.Fields.List {
    // get fld.Type as string
}

…and would like to get a simple string representation of fld.Type, as it appears in the source code, e.g. []int or map[byte]float64.

The ast package field type Type property is an Expr, so I’ve found myself getting off into the weeds using type switches and handling every type specifically – when my only goal is to get out the plain string to the right of each field name, which seems like it should be simpler.

Is there a simple way?

1
  • Have you tried theFileString[fld.Type.Pos():fld.Type.End()]?
    – mjibson
    Nov 27, 2013 at 6:06

4 Answers 4

20

There are two things you could be getting at here, one is the type of an expression as would ultimately be resolved during compilation and the other is the code which would determine that type.

Digging through the docs, I don't believe the first is at all available. You can get at the later, however, by using End() and Pos() on Node.

Quick example program:

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "go/ast"
    "go/parser"
    "go/token"
)

func main() {
    src := `
        package foo

    type Thing struct {
    Field1 string
    Field2 []int
    Field3 map[byte]float64
  }`

    fset := token.NewFileSet()
    f, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, "", src, 0)

    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }

    // hard coding looking these up
    typeDecl := f.Decls[0].(*ast.GenDecl)
    structDecl := typeDecl.Specs[0].(*ast.TypeSpec).Type.(*ast.StructType)
    fields := structDecl.Fields.List

    for _, field := range fields {
        typeExpr := field.Type

        start := typeExpr.Pos() - 1
        end := typeExpr.End() - 1

        // grab it in source
        typeInSource := src[start:end]

        fmt.Println(typeInSource)
    }

}

This prints:

string
[]int
map[byte]float64

I through this together in the golang playground, if you want to mess with it.

1
  • 1
    Helpful and also unfortunate. :) The file business is way upstream in my program, gonna have to restructure. Nov 27, 2013 at 15:43
9

You can use go/types ExprString

This works with complicated types like []string, []map[string]string, etc.

import (
    ...
    "go/types"
    ...
)

...

// typ is a *ast.StructType representing the above   
for _, fld := range typ.Fields.List {
    ...
    typeExpr := fld.Type
    typeString := types.ExprString(typeExpr)
    ...
}

https://golang.org/src/go/types/exprstring.go

1
  • 1
    This is a better answer, go/ast stores the Type in the Expr, use types.ExprString to get it. Oct 17, 2022 at 2:43
6

This is exactly what Fprint in the go/printer package is for. It takes any AST node as an argument and writes its string representation to a io.Writer.

You can use it in your example as follows:

package main

import (
    "bytes"
    "fmt"
    "go/ast"
    "go/parser"
    "go/printer"
    "go/token"
    "log"
)

func main() {
    src := `
        package foo

    type Thing struct {
    Field1 string
    Field2 []int
    Field3 map[byte]float64
  }`

    fset := token.NewFileSet()
    f, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, "", src, 0)

    if err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }
    typeDecl := f.Decls[0].(*ast.GenDecl)
    structDecl := typeDecl.Specs[0].(*ast.TypeSpec).Type.(*ast.StructType)

    for i, fld := range structDecl.Fields.List {
        // get fld.Type as string
        var typeNameBuf bytes.Buffer
        err := printer.Fprint(&typeNameBuf, fset, fld.Type)
        if err != nil {
            log.Fatalf("failed printing %s", err)
        }
        fmt.Printf("field %d has type %q\n", i, typeNameBuf.String())
    }
}

Output:

field 0 has type "string"
field 1 has type "[]int"
field 2 has type "map[byte]float64"

Try it in playground: https://play.golang.org/p/cyrCLt_JEzQ

2

I found a way to do this without using the original source code as a reference for simple members (not slices, arrays or structs):

          for _, field := range fields {
                 switch field.Type.(type) {
                 case *ast.Ident:
                     stype := field.Type.(*ast.Ident).Name // The type as a string
                     tag = ""
                     if field.Tag != nil {
                         tag = field.Tag.Value //the tag as a string
                     }
                     name := field.Names[0].Name //name as a string
                     ...

For the non-simple members you just need another case statement (IE: case *ast.ArrayType:).

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.