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This repository was archived by the owner on Jun 27, 2023. It is now read-only.
I have a suggestion that the generated mock implementation code could include a var that illustrates the implemented interface.
This has become moderately widespread idiomatic practice, mostly for the purpose of documenting a type that matches an interface. Because Go doesn't include explicit syntax matching types to interfaces (and it doesn't need to, which is a good thing), this idiomatic practice has emerged instead.
An example is most useful here. Suppose I want to mock net/http/ResponseWriter. Using mockgen, I get
// Mock of ResponseWriter interface
type MockResponseWriter struct {
ctrl *gomock.Controller
recorder *_MockResponseWriterRecorder
}
My suggestion is that mockgen should also generate this:
var _ *http.ResponseWriter = &MockResponseWriter{}
it would be clear to anyone reading the code that there is an implied 'implements' relationship between the type MockResponseWriter and the interface ResponseWriter. We know this because the compiler type-checks the var declaration in a way that guarantees it to be true (given that the compiler is successful). The var introduces an unnamed variable that is never used; presumably the compiler can notice that it's unused and eliminate it from the binary code.