You can use the reflect.TypeOf() function to obtain a reflect.Type type descriptor. From there, you can list fields of the dynamic value stored in the interface.
Example:
type Point struct {
X int
Y int
}
var reply interface{} = Point{1, 2}
t := reflect.TypeOf(reply)
for i := 0; i < t.NumField(); i++ {
fmt.Printf("%+v\n", t.Field(i))
}
Output:
{Name:X PkgPath: Type:int Tag: Offset:0 Index:[0] Anonymous:false}
{Name:Y PkgPath: Type:int Tag: Offset:4 Index:[1] Anonymous:false}
The result of a Type.Field() call is a reflect.StructField value which is a struct, containing the name of the field among other things:
type StructField struct {
// Name is the field name.
Name string
// ...
}
If you also want the values of the fields, you may use reflect.ValueOf() to obtain a reflect.Value(), and then you may use Value.Field() or Value.FieldByName():
v := reflect.ValueOf(reply)
for i := 0; i < v.NumField(); i++ {
fmt.Println(v.Field(i))
}
Output:
1
2
Try it on the Go Playground.
Note: often a pointer to struct is wrapped in an interface. In such cases you may use Type.Elem() and Value.Elem() to "navigate" to the pointed type or value:
t := reflect.TypeOf(reply).Elem()
v := reflect.ValueOf(reply).Elem()
If you don't know whether it's a pointer or not, you can check it with Type.Kind() and Value.Kind(), comparing the result with reflect.Ptr:
t := reflect.TypeOf(reply)
if t.Kind() == reflect.Ptr {
t = t.Elem()
}
// ...
v := reflect.ValueOf(reply)
if v.Kind() == reflect.Ptr {
v = v.Elem()
}
Try this variant on the Go Playground.
For a detailed introduction to Go's reflection, read the blog post: The Laws of Reflection.