40 lines
1.2 KiB
Markdown
40 lines
1.2 KiB
Markdown
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# Consul `types` Package
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The Go language has a strong type system built into the language. The
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`types` package corrals named types into a single package that is terminal in
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`go`'s import graph. The `types` package should not have any downstream
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dependencies. Each subsystem that defines its own set of types exists in its
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own file, but all types are defined in the same package.
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# Why
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> Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.
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`string` is a useful container and underlying type for identifiers, however
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the `string` type is effectively opaque to the compiler in terms of how a
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given string is intended to be used. For instance, there is nothing
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preventing the following from happening:
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```go
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// `map` of Widgets, looked up by ID
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var widgetLookup map[string]*Widget
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// ...
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var widgetID string = "widgetID"
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w, found := widgetLookup[widgetID]
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// Bad!
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var widgetName string = "name of widget"
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w, found := widgetLookup[widgetName]
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```
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but this class of problem is entirely preventable:
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```go
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type WidgetID string
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var widgetLookup map[WidgetID]*Widget
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var widgetName
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```
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TL;DR: intentions and idioms aren't statically checked by compilers. The
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`types` package uses Go's strong type system to prevent this class of bug.
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