I am iterating an array of structs which have a map field:
type Config struct {
// ... some other fields
KV map[string]interface{} `json:"kv"`
}
In a test file, I know KV is empty, so I am iterating the array of Config objects and assigning it a new map:
for _, v := range wrapper.Configs { // I know this is length > 0
newMap := map[string]interface{}{
"key1": "val1",
"key2": "val2",
"key3": "val3",
}
v.KV = newMap // I have first tried directly assigning. Didn't work, tried copy - didn't work either
}
for _, v := range wrapper.Configs {
fmt.Println(v.KV)
}
But after the loop, KV is always empty.
I also tried:
for _, v := range wrapper.Configs { // I know this is length > 0
v.KV = make(map[string]interface{})
newMap := map[string]interface{}{
"key1": "val1",
"key2": "val2",
"key3": "val3",
}
for kk, vv := range newMap {
v.KV[kk] = vv
}
I haven't been able to identify how to do this correctly, and also, efficiently.
Searched quite a bit but my search terms gave me unrelated results.
CodePudding user response:
Assuming wrapper.Configs is a slice of structs (rather than a slice of pointers to structs), v is a copy of the item in your slice, so updates don't change the originals.
To get this code to work, you can write:
for i := range wrapper.Configs {
v := &wrapper.Configs[i]
...
}
