如何在控制台中打印结构变量?

How can I print (in the console) the Id, Title, Name, etc. of this struct in Golang?

type Project struct {
    Id int64 `json:"project_id"`
    Title string `json:"title"`
    Name string `json:"name"`
    Data Data `json:"data"`
    Commits Commits `json:"commits"`
}

转载于:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24512112/how-to-print-struct-variables-in-console

To print the name of the fields in a struct:

fmt.Printf("%+v\n", yourProject)

From the fmt package:

when printing structs, the plus flag (%+v) adds field names

That supposes you have an instance of Project (in 'yourProject')

The article JSON and Go will give more details on how to retrieve the values from a JSON struct.


This Go by example page provides another technique:

type Response2 struct {
  Page   int      `json:"page"`
  Fruits []string `json:"fruits"`
}

res2D := &Response2{
    Page:   1,
    Fruits: []string{"apple", "peach", "pear"}}
res2B, _ := json.Marshal(res2D)
fmt.Println(string(res2B))

That would print:

{"Page":1,"Fruits":["apple","peach","pear"]}

If you don't have any instance, then you need to use reflection to display the name of the field of a given struct, as in this example.

type T struct {
    A int
    B string
}

t := T{23, "skidoo"}
s := reflect.ValueOf(&t).Elem()
typeOfT := s.Type()

for i := 0; i < s.NumField(); i++ {
    f := s.Field(i)
    fmt.Printf("%d: %s %s = %v\n", i,
        typeOfT.Field(i).Name, f.Type(), f.Interface())
}

I want to recommend go-spew, which according to their github "Implements a deep pretty printer for Go data structures to aid in debugging"

go get -u github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew

usage example:

package main

import (
    "github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew"
)

type Project struct {
    Id      int64  `json:"project_id"`
    Title   string `json:"title"`
    Name    string `json:"name"`
    Data    string `json:"data"`
    Commits string `json:"commits"`
}

func main() {

    o := Project{Name: "hello", Title: "world"}
    spew.Dump(o)
}

output:

(main.Project) {
 Id: (int64) 0,
 Title: (string) (len=5) "world",
 Name: (string) (len=5) "hello",
 Data: (string) "",
 Commits: (string) ""
}

There's also go-render, which handles pointer recursion and lots of key sorting for string and int maps.

Installation:

go get github.com/luci/go-render/render

Example:

type customType int
type testStruct struct {
        S string
        V *map[string]int
        I interface{}
}

a := testStruct{
        S: "hello",
        V: &map[string]int{"foo": 0, "bar": 1},
        I: customType(42),
}

fmt.Println("Render test:")
fmt.Printf("fmt.Printf:    %#v\n", a)))
fmt.Printf("render.Render: %s\n", Render(a))

Which prints:

fmt.Printf:    render.testStruct{S:"hello", V:(*map[string]int)(0x600dd065), I:42}
render.Render: render.testStruct{S:"hello", V:(*map[string]int){"bar":1, "foo":0}, I:render.customType(42)}

Visit here to see the complete code. Here you will also find a link for an online terminal where the complete code can be run and the program represents how to extract structure's information(field's name their type & value). Below is the program snippet that only prints the field names.

package main

import "fmt"
import "reflect"

func main() {
    type Book struct {
        Id    int
        Name  string
        Title string
    }

    book := Book{1, "Let us C", "Enjoy programming with practice"}
    e := reflect.ValueOf(&book).Elem()

    for i := 0; i < e.NumField(); i++ {
        fieldName := e.Type().Field(i).Name
        fmt.Printf("%v\n", fieldName)
    }
}

/*
Id
Name
Title
*/

I think it would be better to implement a custom stringer if you want some kind of formatted output of a struct

for example

package main

    import "fmt"

    type Project struct {
        Id int64 `json:"project_id"`
        Title string `json:"title"`
        Name string `json:"name"`
    }

    func (p Project) String() string {
        return fmt.Sprintf("{Id:%d, Title:%s, Name:%s}", p.Id, p.Title, p.Name)
    }

    func main() {
        o := Project{Id: 4, Name: "hello", Title: "world"}
        fmt.Printf("%+v\n", o)
    }

Another way is, create a func called toString that takes struct, format the fields as you wish.

import (
    "fmt"
)

type T struct {
    x, y string
}

func (r T) toString() string {
    return "Formate as u need :" + r.x + r.y
}

func main() {
    r1 := T{"csa", "ac"}
    fmt.Println("toStringed : ", r1.toString())
}
p = Project{...}
fmt.Printf("%+v", p)
fmt.Printf("%#v", p) //with type

I want to recommend Stuct Example GO language program with an example of Struc Type.

package main

import (
"fmt"
)

func main() {
    type Salary struct{
        Basic, HRA, TA float64      
    }

    type Employee struct{
        FirstName, LastName, Email string
        Age int
        MonthlySalary []Salary
    }

    e := Employee{
        FirstName: "Mark",
        LastName: "Jones",
        Email: "mark@gmail.com",
        Age: 25,
        MonthlySalary: []Salary{
            Salary{
                Basic:15000.00,
                HRA:5000.00,
                TA:2000.00,
            },
            Salary{
                Basic:16000.00,
                HRA:5000.00,
                TA:2100.00,
            },
            Salary{
                Basic:17000.00,
                HRA:5000.00,
                TA:2200.00,
            },
        },
    }
    fmt.Println(e.FirstName,e.LastName)
    fmt.Println(e.Age)
    fmt.Println(e.Email)
    fmt.Println(e.MonthlySalary[0])
    fmt.Println(e.MonthlySalary[1])
    fmt.Println(e.MonthlySalary[2])
}

Without using external libraries and with new line after each field:

log.Println(
            strings.Replace(
                fmt.Sprintf("%#v", post), ", ", "\n", -1))

I like litter.

From their readme:

type Person struct {
  Name   string
  Age    int
  Parent *Person
}

litter.Dump(Person{
  Name:   "Bob",
  Age:    20,
  Parent: &Person{
    Name: "Jane",
    Age:  50,
  },
})

Sdump is pretty handy in tests:

func TestSearch(t *testing.T) {
  result := DoSearch()

  actual := litterOpts.Sdump(result)
  expected, err := ioutil.ReadFile("testdata.txt")
  if err != nil {
    // First run, write test data since it doesn't exist
        if !os.IsNotExist(err) {
      t.Error(err)
    }
    ioutil.Write("testdata.txt", actual, 0644)
    actual = expected
  }
  if expected != actual {
    t.Errorf("Expected %s, got %s", expected, actual)
  }
}

my 2cents would be to use json.MarshalIndent -- surprised this isn't suggested, as it is the most straightforward. for example:

func prettyPrint(i interface{}) string {
    s, _ := json.MarshalIndent(i, "", "\t")
    return string(s)
}

no external deps and results in nicely formatted output.

When you have more complex structures, you might need to convert to JSON before printing:

// Convert structs to JSON.
data, err := json.Marshal(myComplexStruct)
if err != nil {
    log.Fatal(
}
fmt.Printf("%s\n", data)

Source: https://gist.github.com/tetsuok/4942960

I recommend to use Pretty Printer Library. In that you can print any struct very easily.

  1. Install Library

    https://github.com/kr/pretty

or

go get github.com/kr/pretty

Now do like this in your code

package main

import (
fmt
github.com/kr/pretty
)

func main(){

type Project struct {
    Id int64 `json:"project_id"`
    Title string `json:"title"`
    Name string `json:"name"`
    Data Data `json:"data"`
    Commits Commits `json:"commits"`
}

fmt.Printf("%# v", pretty.Formatter(Project)) //It will print all struct details

fmt.Printf("%# v", pretty.Formatter(Project.Id)) //It will print component one by one.

}

Also you can get difference between component through this library and so more. You can also have a look on library Docs here.

fmt.Println("%+v", structure variable)

A better way to do this would be to create a global constant for the string "%+v" in a package called "commons"(maybe) and use it everywhere in your code

//In commons package
const STRUCTURE_DATA_FMT = "%+v"

//In your code everywhere
fmt.Println(commons.STRUCTURE_DATA_FMT, structure variable)