I’m just working through the Go tour, and I’m confused about pointers and interfaces. Why doesn’t this Go code compile?
package main
type Interface interface {}
type Struct struct {}
func main() {
var ps *Struct
var pi *Interface
pi = ps
_, _ = pi, ps
}
i.e. if Struct is an Interface, why wouldn’t a *Struct be a *Interface?
The error message I get is:
prog.go:10: cannot use ps (type *Struct) as type *Interface in assignment:
*Interface is pointer to interface, not interface
When you have a struct implementing an interface, a pointer to that struct implements automatically that interface too. That’s why you never have
*SomeInterfacein the prototype of functions, as this wouldn’t add anything toSomeInterface, and you don’t need such a type in variable declaration (see this related question).An interface value isn’t the value of the concrete struct (as it has a variable size, this wouldn’t be possible), but it’s a kind of pointer (to be more precise a pointer to the struct and a pointer to the type). Russ Cox describes it exactly here :
This is why
Interface, and not*Interfaceis the correct type to hold a pointer to a struct implementingInterface.So you must simply use