Book Image

Go Programming Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Aaron Torres
Book Image

Go Programming Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Aaron Torres

Overview of this book

Go (or Golang) is a statically typed programming language developed at Google. Known for its vast standard library, it also provides features such as garbage collection, type safety, dynamic-typing capabilities, and additional built-in types. This book will serve as a reference while implementing Go features to build your own applications. This Go cookbook helps you put into practice the advanced concepts and libraries that Golang offers. The recipes in the book follow best practices such as documentation, testing, and vendoring with Go modules, as well as performing clean abstractions using interfaces. You'll learn how code works and the common pitfalls to watch out for. The book covers basic type and error handling, and then moves on to explore applications, such as websites, command-line tools, and filesystems, that interact with users. You'll even get to grips with parallelism, distributed systems, and performance tuning. By the end of the book, you'll be able to use open source code and concepts in Go programming to build enterprise-class applications without any hassle.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Parallelism and Concurrency

The recipes in this chapter cover worker pools, wait groups for asynchronous operations, and the use of the context package. Parallelism and concurrency are some of the most advertised and promoted features of the Go language. This chapter will offer a number of useful patterns to get you started and help you understand these features.

Go provides primitives that make parallel applications possible. Goroutines allow any function to become asynchronous and concurrent. Channels allow an application to set up communication with Goroutines. One of the famous sayings in Go is, "Do not communicate by sharing memory; instead, share memory by communicating", and is from https://blog.golang.org/share-memory-by-communicating.

In this chapter, we will cover the following recipes:

  • Using channels and the select statement
  • Performing async operations with sync...