I'm trying to clean up my code base by doing a better job defining interfaces and using embedded structs to reuse functionality. In my case I have many entity types that can be linked to various objects. I want to define interfaces that capture the requirements and structs that implement the interfaces which can then be embedded into the entities.
// All entities implement this interface
type Entity interface {
Identifier()
Type()
}
// Interface for entities that can link Foos
type FooLinker interface {
LinkFoo()
}
type FooLinkerEntity struct {
Foo []*Foo
}
func (f *FooLinkerEntity) LinkFoo() {
// Issue: Need to access Identifier() and Type() here
// but FooLinkerEntity doesn't implement Entity
}
// Interface for entities that can link Bars
type BarLinker interface {
LinkBar()
}
type BarLinkerEntity struct {
Bar []*Bar
}
func (b *BarLinkerEntity) LinkBar() {
// Issues: Need to access Identifier() and Type() here
// but BarLinkerEntity doesn't implement Entity
}
So my first thought was to have FooLinkerEntity and BarLinkerEntity just implement the Entity interface.
// Implementation of Entity interface
type EntityModel struct {
Id string
Object string
}
func (e *EntityModel) Identifier() { return e.Id }
func (e *EntityModel) Type() { return e.Type }
type FooLinkerEntity struct {
EntityModel
Foo []*Foo
}
type BarLinkerEntity struct {
EntityModel
Bar []*Bar
}
However, this ends up with an ambiguity error for any types that can link both Foos and Bars.
// Baz.Identifier() is ambiguous between EntityModel, FooLinkerEntity,
// and BarLinkerEntity.
type Baz struct {
EntityModel
FooLinkerEntity
BarLinkerEntity
}
What's the correct Go way to structure this type of code? Do I just do a type assertion in LinkFoo()
and LinkBar()
to get to Identifier()
and Type()
? Is there any way to get this check at compile time instead of runtime?
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