In Go, how do you create the instance of an object from its type at run time? I suppose you would also need to get the actual type
of the object first too?
I am trying to do lazy instantiation to save memory.
In order to do that you need reflect
.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"reflect"
)
func main() {
// one way is to have a value of the type you want already
a := 1
// reflect.New works kind of like the built-in function new
// We'll get a reflected pointer to a new int value
intPtr := reflect.New(reflect.TypeOf(a))
// Just to prove it
b := intPtr.Elem().Interface().(int)
// Prints 0
fmt.Println(b)
// We can also use reflect.New without having a value of the type
var nilInt *int
intType := reflect.TypeOf(nilInt).Elem()
intPtr2 := reflect.New(intType)
// Same as above
c := intPtr2.Elem().Interface().(int)
// Prints 0 again
fmt.Println(c)
}
You can do the same thing with a struct type instead of an int. Or anything else, really. Just be sure to know the distinction between new and make when it comes to map and slice types.