Interfaces in Go
Golang Concepts
Go: Interfaces
Interfaces are named collections of method signatures.
It defines a set of behaviors that a type must implement in order to be considered an instance of that interface.
How to define an interface in Go:
Here's an example of how to define an interface in Go:
type Shape interface {
Area() float64
Perimeter() float64
}
In this example, we define an interface called Shape
that has two method signatures: Area()
and Perimeter()
. Any type that implements these two methods will be considered an instance of the Shape
interface.
How to implements an interface in Go
To implement an interface, we have to define a struct and provide implementations for the methods in the interface:
type Rectangle struct {
Width float64
Height float64
}
func (r Rectangle) Area() float64 {
return r.Width * r.Height
}
func (r Rectangle) Perimeter() float64 {
return 2 * (r.Width + r.Height)
}
In this example, we define a struct called Rectangle
with two fields: Width
and Height
. We then provide implementations for the Area()
and Perimeter()
methods in the Shape
interface. Since the Rectangle
struct has these two methods, it is considered an instance of the Shape
interface.
How to create a function using interface
You can use an interface to create a function that accepts any type that implements the interface:
func PrintShapeInfo(s Shape) {
fmt.Println("Area:", s.Area())
fmt.Println("Perimeter:", s.Perimeter())
}
r := Rectangle{Width: 10, Height: 5}
PrintShapeInfo(r)