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Add Produce The Zero Value Of A Generic Type as a Go TIL

This commit is contained in:
jbranchaud
2024-12-20 15:19:10 -06:00
parent 8801f39df0
commit 464a2af6db
2 changed files with 34 additions and 1 deletions

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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ pairing with smart people at Hashrocket.
For a steady stream of TILs, [sign up for my newsletter](https://crafty-builder-6996.ck.page/e169c61186).
_1543 TILs and counting..._
_1544 TILs and counting..._
---
@@ -412,6 +412,7 @@ _1543 TILs and counting..._
- [Not So Random](go/not-so-random.md)
- [Parse A String Into Individual Fields](go/parse-a-string-into-individual-fields.md)
- [Parse Flags From CLI Arguments](go/parse-flags-from-cli-arguments.md)
- [Produce The Zero Value Of A Generic Type](go/produce-the-zero-value-of-a-generic-type.md)
- [Redirect File To Stdin During Delve Debug](go/redirect-file-to-stdin-during-delve-debug.md)
- [Replace The Current Process With An External Command](go/replace-the-current-process-with-an-external-command.md)
- [Sleep For A Duration](go/sleep-for-a-duration.md)

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# Produce The Zero Value For A Generic Type
While writing a _pop_ function that would work with slices of a generic type, I
ran into the issue of needing to produce a zero value of type `T` when
returning early for an empty slice.
The way to arbitrarily get the zero value of a generic in Go is with `*new(T)`.
I was able to use this in my `Pop` function like so:
```go
func Pop[T any](slice []T) (T, error) {
if len(slice) == 0 {
return *new(T), fmt.Errorf("cannot pop an empty slice")
}
lastItem := slice[len(slice)-1]
slice = slice[:len(slice)-1]
return lastItem, nil
}
```
If this is happening in multiple functions and we want a more self-documenting
approach, we can pull it out into a function `zero`:
```go
func zero[T any]() T {
return *new(T)
}
```