Reputation: 1154
It is possible to pass pointer over channel in go lang? I need to pass struct, do changes in it and have theese changes in the same function from where struct was passed?
I tried
chan <- &data
and I got
# command-line-arguments .\o.go:130: cannot use &duom[i] (type *KaVartoti) as type KaVartoti in send
after this I tried
chan <- *data
and I got
# command-line-arguments .\o.go:130: invalid indirect of duom[i] (type KaVartoti)
So, it is possible to send pointer through channel in Go ir not?
Upvotes: 19
Views: 30032
Reputation: 1138
Check Following Example:
package main
type weburl struct {
url string
}
type responseweburl struct {
contents, index string
}
var urlmap = make(map[string]weburl)
func callurl(ch chan *responseweburl, index, url string, wg *sync.WaitGroup) {
defer wg.Done()
response, err := http.Get(url)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("%s", err)
os.Exit(1)
} else {
defer response.Body.Close()
contents, err := ioutil.ReadAll(response.Body)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("%s", err)
os.Exit(1)
}
var responsedata = responseweburl{string(contents), string(index)}
ch <- responsedata
}
}
func main(){
urlmap["google"] = weburl{"http://www.google.com"}
urlmap["facebook"] = weburl{"http://www.facebook.com"}
urlmap["linkedin"] = weburl{"http://www.linkedin.com"}
ch := make(chan *responseweburl)
for index, _ := range urlmap {
fmt.Println("call url " + index)
go callurl(ch, index, urlmap[index].url, wg)
}
}
Upvotes: -3
Reputation: 229158
Sure you can, e.g.
package main
type Data struct {
i int
}
func func1(c chan *Data ) {
for {
var t *Data;
t = <-c //receive
t.i += 10 //increment
c <- t //send it back
}
}
func main() {
c := make(chan *Data)
t := Data{10}
go func1(c)
println(t.i)
c <- &t //send a pointer to our t
i := <-c //receive the result
println(i.i)
println(t.i)
}
See in Go Playground.
The error you get tells you that your channel takes a KaVartoti struct, you'll have to create a channel of KaVartoti pointers (a chan *KaVartoti
).
At a guess, your duom
variable is an array/slice, so if you want to send a pointer to one of the elements, you'd use your first approach of &duom[i]
Upvotes: 23