In case of a multi-value return function you can't refer to fields or methods of a specific value of the result when calling the function.
And if one of them is an error
, it's there for a reason (which is the function might fail) and you should not bypass it because if you do, your subsequent code might also fail miserably (e.g. resulting in runtime panic).
However there might be situations where you know the code will not fail in any circumstances. In these cases you can provide a helper function (or method) which will discard the error
(or raise a runtime panic if it still occurs).
This can be the case if you provide the input values for a function from code, and you know they work.
Great examples of this are the template
and regexp
packages: if you provide a valid template or regexp at compile time, you can be sure they can always be parsed without errors at runtime. For this reason the template
package provides the Must(t *Template, err error) *Template
function and the regexp
package provides the MustCompile(str string) *Regexp
function: they don't return error
s because their intended use is where the input is guaranteed to be valid.
Examples:
// "text" is a valid template, parsing it will not fail
var t = template.Must(template.New("name").Parse("text"))
// `^[a-z]+\[[0-9]+\]$` is a valid regexp, always compiles
var validID = regexp.MustCompile(`^[a-z]+\[[0-9]+\]$`)
IF you can be certain Get()
will not produce error
for certain input values, you can create a helper Must()
function which would not return the error
but raise a runtime panic if it still occurs:
func Must(i Item, err error) Item {
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return i
}
But you should not use this in all cases, just when you're sure it succeeds. Usage:
val := Must(Get(1)).Value
Alternative / Simplification
You can even simplify it further if you incorporate the Get()
call into your helper function, let's call it MustGet
:
func MustGet(value int) Item {
i, err := Get(value)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return i
}
Usage:
val := MustGet(1).Value
See some interesting / related questions:
how to parse multiple returns in golang
Return map like 'ok' in Golang on normal functions
Yes, there is.
Surprising, huh? You can get a specific value from a multiple return using a simple mute
function:
package main
import "fmt"
import "strings"
func µ(a ...interface{}) []interface{} {
return a
}
type A struct {
B string
C func()(string)
}
func main() {
a := A {
B:strings.TrimSpace(µ(E())[1].(string)),
C:µ(G())[0].(func()(string)),
}
fmt.Printf ("%s says %s\n", a.B, a.C())
}
func E() (bool, string) {
return false, "F"
}
func G() (func()(string), bool) {
return func() string { return "Hello" }, true
}
https://play.golang.org/p/IwqmoKwVm-
Notice how you select the value number just like you would from a slice/array and then the type to get the actual value.
You can read more about the science behind that from this article. Credits to the author.
No, but that is a good thing since you should always handle your errors.
There are techniques that you can employ to defer error handling, see Errors are values by Rob Pike.
ew := &errWriter{w: fd} ew.write(p0[a:b]) ew.write(p1[c:d]) ew.write(p2[e:f]) // and so on if ew.err != nil { return ew.err }
In this example from the blog post he illustrates how you could create an errWriter
type that defers error handling till you are done calling write
.
No, you cannot directly access the first value.
I suppose a hack for this would be to return an array of values instead of "item" and "err", and then just do
item, _ := Get(1)[0]
but I would not recommend this.
How about this way?
package main
import (
"fmt"
"errors"
)
type Item struct {
Value int
Name string
}
var items []Item = []Item{{Value:0, Name:"zero"},
{Value:1, Name:"one"},
{Value:2, Name:"two"}}
func main() {
var err error
v := Get(3, &err).Value
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err)
return
}
fmt.Println(v)
}
func Get(value int, err *error) Item {
if value > (len(items) - 1) {
*err = errors.New("error")
return Item{}
} else {
return items[value]
}
}
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