Convert nil interface to pointer of something in Golang?

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生来不讨喜
生来不讨喜 2020-12-25 15:18

In the following code piece, trying to convert a nil interface to a pointer of something fails with the following error: interface conversion: interface is nil, not *m

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  • 2020-12-25 15:56

    This is because a variable of static type Nexter (which is just an interface) may hold values of many different dynamic types.

    Yes, since *Node implements Nexter, your p variable may hold a value of type *Node, but it may hold other types as well which implement Nexter; or it may hold nothing at all (nil value). And Type assertion cannot be used here because quoting from the spec:

    x.(T) asserts that x is not nil and that the value stored in x is of type T.

    But x in your case is nil. And if the type assertion is false, a run-time panic occurs.

    If you change your program to initialize your p variable with:

    var p Nexter = (*Node)(nil)
    

    Your program will run and type assertion succeeds. This is because an interface value actually holds a pair in the form of: (value, dynamic type), and in this case your p will not be nil, but will hold a pair of (nil, *Node); for details see The Laws of Reflection #The representation of an interface.

    If you also want to handle nil values of interface types, you may check it explicitly like this:

    if p != nil {
        n = p.(*Node) // will not fail IF p really contains a value of type *Node
    }
    

    Or better: use the special "comma-ok" form:

    // This will never fail:
    if n, ok := p.(*Node); ok {
        fmt.Printf("n=%#v\n", n)
    }
    

    Using the "comma-ok" form:

    The value of ok is true if the assertion holds. Otherwise it is false and the value of n is the zero value for type T. No run-time panic occurs in this case.

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