Empty or not required struct fields in golang

msecret picture msecret · Jun 14, 2014 · Viewed 50k times · Source

I'm somewhat new to typed languages like Go and am trying to learn the best ways to implement things.

I have two structs that represent models that will be inserted into a mongodb database. One struct (Investment) has the other struct (Group) as one of its fields.

type Group struct {
    Base
    Name string `json:"name" bson"name"`
}

type Investment struct {
    Base
    Symbol string `json:"symbol" bson:"symbol" binding:"required"`
    Group  Group  `json:"group" bson:"group"`
    Fields bson.M `json:"fields" bson:"fields"`
}

The problem I'm having is that in the Investment model, Group is not required. If there is no group, I think its better for it to not be inserted in the db. Whats the best way to handle a db model such as this in Go?

Answer

twotwotwo picture twotwotwo · Jun 14, 2014

tl;dr: Use ,omitempty, and if you need to worry about the difference between a zero value and null/not specified, do what the GitHub API does and use a pointer.


Both json and bson support the ,omitempty tag. For json, "empty values are false, 0, any nil pointer or interface value, and any array, slice, map, or string of length zero" (json docs). For bson, ,omitempty means "Only include the field if it's not set to the zero value for the type or to empty slices or maps", and zero values include empty strings and nil pointers (bson docs).

So if you really need a Group struct, you can put a *Group in instead, and it won't be stored when the pointer is nil. If Investment only needs to hold the group's name, it's even simpler: "" as group name keeps a group key from being stored.

bson defaults to using the lowercased field name already so you can omit that from the struct tag when they match. json will default to the Capitalized name, so specify the lowercase name in a tag if you need lowercase.

So, best case, maybe you can just use:

type Investment struct {
    Base
    Symbol string `json:"symbol" binding:"required"`
    Group string  `json:"group,omitempty" bson:",omitempty"`
    Fields bson.M `json:"fields"`
}

If you ever run into fields where the zero value for the type ("", 0, false, etc.) is distinct from "not specified", you can do what the GitHub API does and put pointers in your structures--essentially an extension of the *Group trick.