From c7d7f10bdff703e4a3c0414e8a33d4e45c91eb35 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dmitry Vyukov Date: Sat, 4 Jul 2020 11:12:55 +0200 Subject: go.mod: vendor golangci-lint --- vendor/github.com/stretchr/objx/doc.go | 66 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 66 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/stretchr/objx/doc.go (limited to 'vendor/github.com/stretchr/objx/doc.go') diff --git a/vendor/github.com/stretchr/objx/doc.go b/vendor/github.com/stretchr/objx/doc.go new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6d6af1a83 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/stretchr/objx/doc.go @@ -0,0 +1,66 @@ +/* +Objx - Go package for dealing with maps, slices, JSON and other data. + +Overview + +Objx provides the `objx.Map` type, which is a `map[string]interface{}` that exposes +a powerful `Get` method (among others) that allows you to easily and quickly get +access to data within the map, without having to worry too much about type assertions, +missing data, default values etc. + +Pattern + +Objx uses a preditable pattern to make access data from within `map[string]interface{}` easy. +Call one of the `objx.` functions to create your `objx.Map` to get going: + + m, err := objx.FromJSON(json) + +NOTE: Any methods or functions with the `Must` prefix will panic if something goes wrong, +the rest will be optimistic and try to figure things out without panicking. + +Use `Get` to access the value you're interested in. You can use dot and array +notation too: + + m.Get("places[0].latlng") + +Once you have sought the `Value` you're interested in, you can use the `Is*` methods to determine its type. + + if m.Get("code").IsStr() { // Your code... } + +Or you can just assume the type, and use one of the strong type methods to extract the real value: + + m.Get("code").Int() + +If there's no value there (or if it's the wrong type) then a default value will be returned, +or you can be explicit about the default value. + + Get("code").Int(-1) + +If you're dealing with a slice of data as a value, Objx provides many useful methods for iterating, +manipulating and selecting that data. You can find out more by exploring the index below. + +Reading data + +A simple example of how to use Objx: + + // Use MustFromJSON to make an objx.Map from some JSON + m := objx.MustFromJSON(`{"name": "Mat", "age": 30}`) + + // Get the details + name := m.Get("name").Str() + age := m.Get("age").Int() + + // Get their nickname (or use their name if they don't have one) + nickname := m.Get("nickname").Str(name) + +Ranging + +Since `objx.Map` is a `map[string]interface{}` you can treat it as such. +For example, to `range` the data, do what you would expect: + + m := objx.MustFromJSON(json) + for key, value := range m { + // Your code... + } +*/ +package objx -- cgit mrf-deployment