How to iterate over an int array in GORM - go

In the Params model I have an array of int Cat_id
I make a request: localhost:8080/products/?cat_id=1,2
And I want to display multiple products from these two categories. How can I parsely build my query?
My func:
func GetAllIproducts(q *models.Products, pagination *models.Params) (*[]models.Products, error) {
var prod []models.Products
offset := (pagination.Page - 1) * pagination.Limit
result := config.DB.Model(&models.Products{}).Where(q).Where("cat_id=?", pagination.Cat_id).Limit(pagination.Limit).Offset(offset).Find(&prod) //Problem is here
if result.Error != nil {
msg := result.Error
return nil, msg
}
return &prod, nil
}
When i use Debug i got this:
SELECT * FROM "products" WHERE cat_id=(1,2) AND "products"."deleted_at" IS NULL

Assuming that the cat_id is an integer (lets assume int64), you could these two things:
Convert pagination.Cat_id string to an []int64 slice (lets call this variable catIDs of type []int64) to get a slice with separated int64 elements.
Change your Where clause to something like this:
result := config.DB.Model(&models.Products{}).Where(q).Where("cat_id IN (?)", catIDs).Limit(pagination.Limit).Offset(offset).Find(&prod)

Related

Using "dynamic" key to extract value from map [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Access struct property by name
(5 answers)
Golang dynamic access to a struct property
(2 answers)
How to access to a struct parameter value from a variable in Golang
(1 answer)
Closed 9 months ago.
Came from javascript background, and just started with Golang. I am learning all the new terms in Golang, and creating new question because I cannot find the answer I need (probably due to lack of knowledge of terms to search for)
I created a custom type, created an array of types, and I want to create a function where I can retrieve all the values of a specific key, and return an array of all the values (brands in this example)
type Car struct {
brand string
units int
}
....
var cars []Car
var singleCar Car
//So i have a loop here and inside the for-loop, i create many single cars
singleCar = Car {
brand: "Mercedes",
units: 20
}
//and i append the singleCar into cars
cars = append(cars, singleCar)
Now what I want to do is to create a function that I can retrieve all the brands, and I tried doing the following. I intend to have key as a dynamic value, so I can search by specific key, e.g. brand, model, capacity etc.
func getUniqueByKey(v []Car, key string) []string {
var combined []string
for i := range v {
combined = append(combined, v[i][key])
//this line returns error -
//invalid operation: cannot index v[i] (map index expression of type Car)compilerNonIndexableOperand
}
return combined
//This is suppose to return ["Mercedes", "Honda", "Ferrari"]
}
The above function is suppose to work if i use getUniqueByKey(cars, "brand") where in this example, brand is the key. But I do not know the syntaxes so it's returning error.
Seems like you're trying to get a property using a slice accessor, which doesn't work in Go. You'd need to write a function for each property. Here's an example with the brands:
func getUniqueBrands(v []Car) []string {
var combined []string
tempMap := make(map[string]bool)
for _, c := range v {
if _, p := tempMap[c.brand]; !p {
tempMap[c.brand] = true
combined = append(combined, c.brand)
}
}
return combined
}
Also, note the for loop being used to get the value of Car here. Go's range can be used to iterate over just indices or both indices and values. The index is discarded by assigning to _.
I would recommend re-using this code with an added switch-case block to get the result you want. If you need to return multiple types, use interface{} and type assertion.
Maybe you could marshal your struct into json data then convert it to a map. Example code:
package main
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
)
type RandomStruct struct {
FieldA string
FieldB int
FieldC string
RandomFieldD bool
RandomFieldE interface{}
}
func main() {
fieldName := "FieldC"
randomStruct := RandomStruct{
FieldA: "a",
FieldB: 5,
FieldC: "c",
RandomFieldD: false,
RandomFieldE: map[string]string{"innerFieldA": "??"},
}
randomStructs := make([]RandomStruct, 0)
randomStructs = append(randomStructs, randomStruct, randomStruct, randomStruct)
res := FetchRandomFieldAndConcat(randomStructs, fieldName)
fmt.Println(res)
}
func FetchRandomFieldAndConcat(randomStructs []RandomStruct, fieldName string) []interface{} {
res := make([]interface{}, 0)
for _, randomStruct := range randomStructs {
jsonData, _ := json.Marshal(randomStruct)
jsonMap := make(map[string]interface{})
err := json.Unmarshal(jsonData, &jsonMap)
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err)
// panic(err)
}
value, exists := jsonMap[fieldName]
if exists {
res = append(res, value)
}
}
return res
}

Append to golang slice passed as empty interface

How to append to empty interface (that has been verified to be a *[]struct)?
func main() {
var mySlice []myStruct // myStruct can be any struct (dynamic)
decode(&mySlice, "...")
}
func decode(dest interface{}, src string) {
// assume dest has been verified to be *[]struct
var modelType reflect.Type = getStructType(dest)
rows, fields := getRows(src)
for _, row := range rows {
// create new struct of type modelType and assign all fields
model := reflect.New(modelType)
for field := fields {
fieldValue := getRowValue(row, field)
model.Elem().FieldByName(field).Set(fieldValue)
}
castedModelRow := model.Elem().Interface()
// append model to dest; how to do this?
// dest = append(dest, castedModelRow)
}
}
Things I've tried:
This simply panics: reflect: call of reflect.Append on ptr Value (as we pass &mySlice instead of mySlice)
dest = reflect.Append(reflect.ValueOf(dest), reflect.ValueOf(castedModelRow))
This works but doesn't set the value back to dest... in main func, len(mySlice) remains 0 after decode function is called.
func decode(dest interface{}, src string) {
...
result := reflect.MakeSlice(reflect.SliceOf(modelType), rowCount, rowCount)
for _, row : range rows {
...
result = reflect.Append(result, reflect.ValueOf(castedModelRow))
}
dest = reflect.ValueOf(result)
}
Here's how to fix the second decode function shown in the question. The statement
dest = reflect.ValueOf(result)
modifies local variable dest, not the caller's value. Use the following statement to modify the caller's slice:
reflect.ValueOf(dest).Elem().Set(result)
The code in the question appends decoded elements after the elements created in reflect.MakeSlice. The resulting slice has len(rows) zero values followed by len(rows) decoded values. Fix by changing
result = reflect.Append(result, reflect.ValueOf(castedModelRow))
to:
result.Index(i).Set(model)
Here's the update version of the second decode function in the question:
func decode(dest interface{}, src string) {
var modelType reflect.Type = getStructType(dest)
rows, fields := getRows(src)
result := reflect.MakeSlice(reflect.SliceOf(modelType), len(rows), len(rows))
for i, row := range rows {
model := reflect.New(modelType).Elem()
for _, field := range fields {
fieldValue := getRowValue(row, field)
model.FieldByName(field).Set(fieldValue)
}
result.Index(i).Set(model)
}
reflect.ValueOf(dest).Elem().Set(result)
}
Run it on the Playground.
You were very close with your original solution. You had to de-reference the pointer before calling the append operation. This solution would be helpful if your dest already had some existing elements and you don't want to lose them by creating a newSlice.
tempDest := reflect.ValueOf(dest).Elem()
tempDest = reflect.Append(tempDest, reflect.ValueOf(model.Interface()))
Similar to how #I Love Reflection pointed out, you finally need to set the new slice back to the pointer.
reflect.ValueOf(dest).Elem().Set(tempDest)
Overall Decode:
var modelType reflect.Type = getStructType(dest)
rows, fields := getRows(src)
tempDest := reflect.ValueOf(dest).Elem()
for _, row := range rows {
model := reflect.New(modelType).Elem()
for _, field := range fields {
fieldValue := getRowValue(row, field)
model.FieldByName(field).Set(fieldValue)
}
tempDest = reflect.Append(tempDest, reflect.ValueOf(model.Interface()))
}
reflect.ValueOf(dest).Elem().Set(tempDest)

Change dataType from bigquery.Value to string

I connect BigQuery with Go language as the following API documentation demonstrates,
https://cloud.google.com/bigquery/docs/reference/libraries?hl=en_US
After that, I need to get sql results in specific row and column, and judge if it equals a specific string. Could I change bigquery.Value to string and how to do that?
See how to use RowIterator.Next() here.
Next loads the next row into dst. Its return value is iterator.Done if there are no more results. Once Next returns iterator.Done, all subsequent calls will return iterator.Done.
dst may implement ValueLoader, or may be a *[]Value, *map[string]Value, or struct pointer.
Value is of type interface{} so if you are sure that value you have is string str := fmt.Sprintf("%v", row[i]) should work. It is often better to define a struct type that has members representing fields of query result row (with types mapped according to the table in documentation I linked above) and give the pointer to it to RowIterator.Next() instead of slice/map of bigquery.Value.
type myRow struct {
Name string
Num int
}
// ...
q := client.Query("select name, num from t1")
it, err := q.Read(ctx)
// handle err
for {
// instead of: var row []bigquery.Value
var row myRow // <-- use custom struct type here
err := it.Next(&row)
if err == iterator.Done {
break
}
// handle err != nil
someFuncThatTakesString(row.Name)
}

how to access nested Json key values in Golang

Team,
new to Programming.
I have data available after unmarshaling the Json as shown below, which has nested Key values. flat key values I am able to access, how do I access nested key values.
Here is the byte slice data shown below after unmarshaling —>
tables:[map[name:basic__snatpool_members] map[name:net__snatpool_members] map[name:optimizations__hosts] map[columnNames:[name] name:pool__hosts rows:[map[row:[ry.hj.com]]]] traffic_group:/Common/traffic-group-1
Flat key values I am able to access by using the following code
p.TrafficGroup = m[“traffic_group”].(string)
here is the complete function
func dataToIapp(name string, d *schema.ResourceData) bigip.Iapp {
var p bigip.Iapp
var obj interface{}
jsonblob := []byte(d.Get("jsonfile").(string))
err := json.Unmarshal(jsonblob, &obj)
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("error", err)
}
m := obj.(map[string]interface{}) // Important: to access property
p.Name = m[“name”].(string)
p.Partition = m[“partition”].(string)
p.InheritedDevicegroup = m[“inherited_devicegroup”].(string)
}
Note: This may not work with your JSON structure. I inferred what it would be based on your question but without the actual structure, I cannot guarantee this to work without modification.
If you want to access them in a map, you need to assert that the interface pulled from the first map is actually a map. So you would need to do this:
tmp := m["tables"]
tables, ok := tmp.(map[string]string)
if !ok {
//error handling here
}
r.Name = tables["name"].(string)
But instead of accessing the unmarshaled JSON as a map[string]interface{}, why don't you create structs that match your JSON output?
type JSONRoot struct {
Name string `json:"name"`
Partition string `json:"partition"`
InheritedDevicegroup string `json:"inherited_devicegroup"`
Tables map[string]string `json:"tables"` //Ideally, this would be a map of structs
}
Then in your code:
func dataToIapp(name string, d *schema.ResourceData) bigip.Iapp {
var p bigip.Iapp
var obj &JSONRoot{}
jsonblob := []byte(d.Get("jsonfile").(string))
err := json.Unmarshal(jsonblob, &obj)
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("error", err)
}
p.Name = obj.Name
p.Partition = obj.Partition
p.InheritedDevicegroup = obj.InheritedDevicegroup
p.Name = obj.Tables["name"]
}
JSON objects are unmarshaled into map[string]interface{}, JSON arrays into []interface{}, same applies for nested objects/arrays.
So for example if a key/index maps to a nested object you need to type assert the value to map[string]interface{} and if the key/index maps to an array of objects you first need to assert the value to []interface{} and then each element to map[string]interface{}.
e.g. (for brevity this code is not guarding against panic)
tables := obj.(map[string]interface{})["tables"]
table1 := tables.([]interface{})[0]
name := table1.(map[string]interface{})["name"]
namestr := name.(string)
However, if it's the case that the json you are parsing is not dynamic but instead has a specific structure you should define a struct type that mirrors that structure and unmarshal the json into that.
All you have to do is repeatedly accessing the map via type-switching or assertion:
for _, table := range m["tables"] {
switch val := table {
case string:
fmt.Println("table is string")
case int:
fmt.Println("table is integer")
// This is your case, since JSON is unmarshaled to type []interface{} and map[string]interface{}
case []interface{}:
fmt.Println("table is a slice of interface{}")
for _, tb := range value {
if m, ok := tb.(map[string]interface{}); ok {
// Now it's accessible
fmt.Println(m["name"])
}
}
default:
fmt.Println("unknown type")
}
}
You might want to handle errors better than this.
To read more, check out my writing from a while ago https://medium.com/code-zen/dynamically-creating-instances-from-key-value-pair-map-and-json-in-go-feef83ab9db2.

Getting Google's datastore Key value with Go

I have a struct:
type struct Foo {
Id ??
Name string
}
I get a list of Foos doing, where "c" is a NewContext():
q := datastore.NewQuery("Drug")
var foos []Foo
_, err := q.GetAll(c, &foos)
The Id is not populated, but the Name is.
I'm trying to figure out how to get the Id to populate
The GetAll function returns a slice of the keys:
keys, err := q.GetAll(c, &foos)
The key for foos[i] is keys[i].
Use a loop to store the id in the entity if that's what you need:
for i := range keys {
foos[i].ID = keys[i].IntID() // or .StringID()
}

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