Book Image

Learning Go Programming

Book Image

Learning Go Programming

Overview of this book

The Go programming language has firmly established itself as a favorite for building complex and scalable system applications. Go offers a direct and practical approach to programming that let programmers write correct and predictable code using concurrency idioms and a full-featured standard library. This is a step-by-step, practical guide full of real world examples to help you get started with Go in no time at all. We start off by understanding the fundamentals of Go, followed by a detailed description of the Go data types, program structures and Maps. After this, you learn how to use Go concurrency idioms to avoid pitfalls and create programs that are exact in expected behavior. Next, you will be familiarized with the tools and libraries that are available in Go for writing and exercising tests, benchmarking, and code coverage. Finally, you will be able to utilize some of the most important features of GO such as, Network Programming and OS integration to build efficient applications. All the concepts are explained in a crisp and concise manner and by the end of this book; you would be able to create highly efficient programs that you can deploy over cloud.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Learning Go Programming
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

The io.Reader interface


The io.Reader interface, as shown in the following listing, is simple. It consists of a single method, Read([]byte)(int, error), intended to let programmers implement code that reads data, from an arbitrary source, and transfers it into the provided slice of bytes.

type Reader interface { 
        Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) 
} 

The Read method returns the total number of bytes transferred into the provided slice and an error value (if necessary). As a guideline, implementations of the io.Reader should return an error value of io.EOF when the reader has no more data to transfer into stream p. The following shows the type alphaReader, a trivial implementation of the io.Reader that filters out non-alpha characters from its string source:

type alphaReader string 
 
func (a alphaReader) Read(p []byte) (int, error) { 
   count := 0 
   for i := 0; i < len(a); i++ { 
         if (a[i] >= 'A' && a[i] <= 'Z') |...