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Description

Expression language(EL) to manipulate Golang structure data. Its main purpose is to find reflect.Value by Expression, then do some reading and writing.

Programming language: Go
Tags: Utilities     Expresssion     Reflection    

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README

go-el

Expression language(EL) to manipulate Golang structure data. Its main purpose is to find reflect.Value by Expression, then do some reading and writing.

Installation

Simple as it takes to type the following command:

go get github.com/lysu/go-el

and import with

import github.com/lysu/go-el    

Usage

Example Data

As example, we have some data like this:

type Comment struct {
    NickName string
    Content  string
    Date     time.Time
}

type Author struct {
  Name string
}

type Blog struct {
    Title      string
    RoleState  map[string]uint
    CommentIds []uint64
    Comments   map[string]*Comment
}

func (b Blog) FirstComment() *Comment {
    return b.Comments["0"]
}

then we init them with some test data:

b := &Blog{
  Title:      "Blog title1",
  CommentIds: []uint64{1, 3},
  Comments: map[string]*Comment{
    "0": {
      NickName: "000",
      Content:  "test",
      Date:     time.Now(),
    },
    "1": {
      NickName: "u1",
      Content:  "test",
      Date:     time.Now(),
    },
    "3": {
      NickName: "tester",
      Content:  "test hehe...",
      Date:     time.Now(),
    },
  },
  Author: Author{
      Name: "Author 1",
  },
  RoleState: map[string]uint{},
}

Expression

Using el.Expression, we can navigate from root(b) to anywhere in this structure.

1. To field

exp := el.Expression("Title")
v, _ := exp.Execute(&data)
fmt.Printf("%v\n", v.interface()) //==> Blog title1

2. To nested field

exp := el.Expression("Author.Name")
v, _ := exp.Execute(&data)
fmt.Printf("%v\n", v.interface()) //==> Author 1

3. To slice/array/string item

exp := el.Expression("CommentIds[0]")
v, _ := exp.Execute(&data)
fmt.Printf("%v\n", v.interface()) //==> 1

4. To map item

exp := el.Expression("Comments["3"].NickName")
v, _ := exp.Execute(&data)
fmt.Printf("%v\n", v.interface()) //==> tester

5. Item in[] also can be another Expression

exp := el.Expression("Comments["CommentIds[0]].NickName")
v, _ := exp.Execute(&data)
fmt.Printf("%v\n", v.interface()) //==> u1

6. Call function

function can return only ONE result

exp := el.Expression("FirstComment().Content")
v, _ := exp.Execute(&data)
fmt.Printf("%v\n", v.interface()) //==> test  

7. Modify Value

After Execute expression, we got a relfect.Value, we also can use it to modify data, e.g.

exp := el.Expression("FirstComment().Content")
v, _ := exp.Execute(&data)
v.SetString("1111")

will let first comment with value 1111

Beside that we recommend users take a moment to look The Laws of Reflection, take care some limition that reflect has.

Patcher

Base on Expression, we also provide a tool named Patcher, the purpose of it is to let use modify object with expression easier and be batched.

We found it's very useful to build HTTP Patch API to partial update entity

ps := p.Patch{
  "Author.Name":                      "ほん",
  "Comments[CommentIds[0]].NickName": "私",
  "roleState[100]":                   uint(100),
}
err := patcher.PatchIt(b, ps)

This will modify three properties at once~ (but we still meet some rule of refect, like map-value use ptr.. and so on)

More

See our Example in Unit-Test:

TODO

generate expression between two data..like diff..- -?

Thanks