For instance, in this answer:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/10385867/20654
...
if exiterr, ok := err.(*exec.ExitError); ok {
...
What is that err.(*exec.ExitError) called? How does it work?
For instance, in this answer:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/10385867/20654
...
if exiterr, ok := err.(*exec.ExitError); ok {
...
What is that err.(*exec.ExitError) called? How does it work?
It's a type assertion. That if statement is checking if err is also a *exec.ExitError. The ok let's you know whether it was or wasn't. Finally, exiterr is err, but "converted" to *exec.ExitError. This only works with interface types.
You can also omit the ok if you're 100000 percent sure of the underlying type. But, if you omit ok and it turns out you were wrong, then you'll get a panic.
// find out at runtime if this is true by checking second value
exitErr, isExitError := err.(*exec.ExitError)
// will panic if err is not *exec.ExitError
exitErr := err.(*exec.ExitError)
The ok isn't part of the syntax, by the way. It's just a boolean and you can name it whatever you want.