is there a way to create an instance of a struct from a string?

Go

Go Problem Overview


Given a struct:

type MyStruct struct {
    A int
    B int
}

and a string with the struct's name

a := "MyStruct"

or

a := "mypkg.MyStruct"

How do I create an instance of my struct from the string name rather than the struct? The idea is that I would create an application with all of the structures linked into the binary but create the runtime instances from the strings. (sort of a meta-meta)

Go Solutions


Solution 1 - Go

There is no central registry of types in Go, so what you ask is impossible in the general case.

You could build up your own registry by hand to support such a feature using a map from strings to reflect.Type values corresponding to each type. For instance:

var typeRegistry = make(map[string]reflect.Type)

func init() {
    myTypes := []interface{}{MyString{}}
    for _, v := range myTypes {
        // typeRegistry["MyString"] = reflect.TypeOf(MyString{})
        typeRegistry[fmt.Sprintf("%T", v)] = reflect.TypeOf(v)
    }
}

You can then create instances of the types like so:

func makeInstance(name string) interface{} {
    v := reflect.New(typeRegistry[name]).Elem()
    // Maybe fill in fields here if necessary
    return v.Interface()
}

Solution 2 - Go

The Go runtime doesn't exposes a list of types built in the program. And there is a reason: you never have to be able to build all types availables but instead just a subset.

You can build yourself this subset using a map. And you can use the reflect package to create an instance from a reflect.Type.

My solution (see on Go Playground) uses typed nil pointers (instead of empty values) to reduce size of allocations when building the map (compared to @james-henstridge solution).

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"reflect"
)

var typeRegistry = make(map[string]reflect.Type)

func registerType(typedNil interface{}) {
	t := reflect.TypeOf(typedNil).Elem()
	typeRegistry[t.PkgPath() + "." + t.Name()] = t
}

type MyString string
type myString string


func init() {
	registerType((*MyString)(nil))
	registerType((*myString)(nil))
	// ...
}

func makeInstance(name string) interface{} {
	return reflect.New(typeRegistry[name]).Elem().Interface()
}

func main() {
	for k := range typeRegistry {
		fmt.Println(k)
	}
	fmt.Printf("%T\n", makeInstance("main.MyString"))
	fmt.Printf("%T\n", makeInstance("main.myString"))
}

Solution 3 - Go

You can create a map of name -> struct "template"

When grabbing a value from a map, you get a copy of the value, the map effectively acts as a factory for your values.

Notice that the values from the map are unique. In order to actually do something with the struct, you'll need to either assert its type or use some reflections based processor (ie: get struct from map, then json decode in to the struct)

Here's a simple Example with one struct in raw form and one pre-filled in. Notice the type assertion on foowv1, that's so I can actually set the value.

package main

import "fmt"

type foo struct {
	a int
}

var factory map[string]interface{} = map[string]interface{}{
	"foo":          foo{},
	"foo.with.val": foo{2},
}

func main() {
	foo1 := factory["foo"]
	foo2 := factory["foo"]
	fmt.Println("foo1", &foo1, foo1)
	fmt.Println("foo2", &foo2, foo2)

	foowv1 := factory["foo.with.val"].(foo)
	foowv1.a = 123
	foowv2 := factory["foo.with.val"]
	fmt.Println("foowv1", &foowv1, foowv1)
	fmt.Println("foowv2", &foowv2, foowv2)
}

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionRichardView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - GoJames HenstridgeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - GodolmenView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - GoDavid BudworthView Answer on Stackoverflow