How to convert interface{} to map

If the map value can be any type, then use reflect to iterate through the map:

if v.Kind() == reflect.Map {
    for _, key := range v.MapKeys() {
        strct := v.MapIndex(key)
        fmt.Println(key.Interface(), strct.Interface())
    }
}

playground example

If there's a small and known set of struct types, then a type switch can be used:

func process(in interface{}) {
  switch v := in.(type) {
  case map[string]*Book:
     for s, b := range v {
         // b has type *Book
         fmt.Printf("%s: book=%v\n" s, b)
     }
  case map[string]*Author:
     for s, a := range v {
         // a has type *Author
         fmt.Printf("%s: author=%v\n" s, a)
     }
   case []*Book:
     for i, b := range v {
         fmt.Printf("%d: book=%v\n" i, b)
     }
   case []*Author:
     for i, a := range v {
         fmt.Printf("%d: author=%v\n" i, a)
     }
   case *Book:
     fmt.Ptintf("book=%v\n", v)
   case *Author:
     fmt.Printf("author=%v\n", v)
   default:
     // handle unknown type
   }
}

This may help:

b := []byte(`{"keyw":"value"}`)

var f interface{}
json.Unmarshal(b, &f)

myMap := f.(map[string]interface{})

fmt.Println(myMap)

You don't need reflect here. Try:

v, ok := in.(map[string]*Book)
if !ok {
    // Can't assert, handle error.
}
for _, s := range v {
    fmt.Printf("Value: %v\n", s)
}

Same goes for the rest of your function. It looks like you're using reflection when you would be better served by a type switch.


Alternatively, if you insist on using reflection here (which doesn't make a lot of sense) you can also use Value.MapKeys with the result from your ValueOf (see the answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/38186057/714501)