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Go Recipes for Developers

Go Recipes for Developers

By : Burak Serdar
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Go Recipes for Developers

Go Recipes for Developers

By: Burak Serdar

Overview of this book

With its simple syntax and sensible conventions, Go has emerged as the language of choice for developers in network programming, web services, data processing, and other settings. This practical guide helps engineers leverage Go through up-to-date recipes that solve common problems in day-to-day programming. Drawing from three decades of distributed systems engineering and technical leadership at companies like Red Hat, Burak Serdar brings battle-tested expertise in building robust, scalable applications. He starts by covering basics of code structure, describing different approaches to organizing packages for different types of projects. You’ll discover practical solutions to engineering challenges in network programming, dealing with processes, databases, data processing pipelines, and testing. Each chapter provides working solutions and production-ready code snippets that you can seamlessly incorporate into your programs while working in sequential and concurrent settings. The solutions leverage the more recent additions to the Go language, such as generics and structured logging. Most of the examples are developed using the Go standard library without any third-party packages. By the end of this book, you’ll have worked through a collection of proven recipes that will equip you accelerate your Go development journey.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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Working with binary data

If you need to send a piece of data over a network connection or store it in a file, you first have to encode it (or serialize it, or marshal it.) This is necessary because the system at the other end of the network connection or the application that will read the file you wrote may be running on a different platform. A portable, easy-to-debug but not necessarily efficient way to do this is to use text-based encodings such as JSON. If performance is paramount or when the use case demands it, you use binary encoding.

There are many high-level binary encoding schemes. Gob (https://pkg.go.dev/encoding/gob) is a Go-specific encoding scheme that can be used for networking applications. Protocol buffers (https://protobuf.dev) provide a language-neutral, extensible, schema-driven mechanism for encoding structured data. There are more. Here, we will look at the basics of binary encoding that every software engineer should know about.

Encoding data involves transforming...

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Go Recipes for Developers
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