51

I am trying to display a list of comma separated values, and don't want to display a comma after the last item (or the only item if there is only one).

My code so far:

Equipment:
    {{$equipment := .Equipment}}
    {{ range $index, $element := .Equipment}}
        {{$element.Name}}
        {{if lt $index ((len $equipment) -1)}}
            ,
        {{end}}
    {{end}}

The current output: Equipment: Mat , Dumbbell , How do I get rid of the trailing comma

5 Answers 5

120

A nice trick you can use is:

Equipment:
    {{$equipment := .Equipment}}
    {{ range $index, $element := .Equipment}}
        {{if $index}},{{end}}
        {{$element.Name}}
    {{end}}

This works because the first index is 0, which returns false in the if statement. So this code returns false for the first index, and then places a comma in front of each following iteration. This results in a comma separated list without a leading or trailing comma.

2
  • 3
    Also, you can still refer to fields without $element: {{.Name}}.
    – x-yuri
    Jul 1, 2019 at 16:19
  • 1
    Why do you need $equipment variable?
    – greatvovan
    Sep 29, 2022 at 22:43
41

Add a template function to do the work for you. strings.Join is perfect for your use case.

Assuming tmpl contains your templates, add the Join function to your template:

tmpl = tmpl.Funcs(template.FuncMap{"StringsJoin": strings.Join})

Template:

Equipment:
    {{ StringsJoin .Equipment ", " }}

Playground

Docs: https://golang.org/pkg/text/template/#FuncMap

1

Another way to skin the cat, if you can create a new type for the field.

type MyList []string

func (list MyList) Join() string {
    return strings.Join(list, ", ")
}

Then you can use the function in the template like regular:

{{ .MyList.Join }}
1

without index

it can be useful for any iteration, like on maps that do not have index:

    {{ $first := true }}
    {{ range $_, $element := .}}
        {{if not $first}}, {{else}} {{$first = false}} {{end}}
        {{$element.Name}}
    {{end}}

Playground

-2

If you are willing to use an external library, it seems like sprig library has a "join" function (see here):

join

Join a list of strings into a single string, with the given separator.

list "hello" "world" | join "_"

The above will produce hello_world

join will try to convert non-strings to a string value:

list 1 2 3 | join "+"

The above will produce 1+2+3

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