Golang type switches
16 August 2024 (Updated 16 August 2024)
A type switch lets you perform several type assertions in a series.
A type switch is like a regular switch statement, but the cases in a type switch specify types (not values), and those values are compared against the type of the value held by the given interface value:
switch v := i.(type) {
case T:
// here v has type T
case S:
// here v has type S
default:
// no match; here v has the same type as i
}
The declaration in a type switch has the same syntax as a type assertion i.(T)
, but the specific type T
is replaced with the keyword type
.
The above switch statement tests whether the interface value i
holds a value of type T
or S
. In each of the T
and S
cases, the variable v
will be of type T
or S
respectively and hold the value held by i
. In the default case (where there is no match), the variable v
is of the same interface type and value as i
.
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Golang