Book Image

The Go Workshop

By : Delio D'Anna, Andrew Hayes, Sam Hennessy, Jeremy Leasor, Gobin Sougrakpam, Dániel Szabó
Book Image

The Go Workshop

By: Delio D'Anna, Andrew Hayes, Sam Hennessy, Jeremy Leasor, Gobin Sougrakpam, Dániel Szabó

Overview of this book

The Go Workshop will take the pain out of learning the Go programming language (also known as Golang). It is designed to teach you to be productive in building real-world software. Presented in an engaging, hands-on way, this book focuses on the features of Go that are used by professionals in their everyday work. Each concept is broken down, clearly explained, and followed up with activities to test your knowledge and build your practical skills. Your first steps will involve mastering Go syntax, working with variables and operators, and using core and complex types to hold data. Moving ahead, you will build your understanding of programming logic and implement Go algorithms to construct useful functions. As you progress, you'll discover how to handle errors, debug code to troubleshoot your applications, and implement polymorphism using interfaces. The later chapters will then teach you how to manage files, connect to a database, work with HTTP servers and REST APIs, and make use of concurrent programming. Throughout this Workshop, you'll work on a series of mini projects, including a shopping cart, a loan calculator, a working hours tracker, a web page counter, a code checker, and a user authentication system. By the end of this book, you'll have the knowledge and confidence to tackle your own ambitious projects with Go.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
1. Variables and Operators
2
2. Logic and Loops

Summary

In this chapter, we studied various methodologies for easing the debugging process such as coding incrementally and testing the code often, writing unit tests, handling all errors, and performing logging on the code.

Looking at the fmt package, we discovered various ways to output information to help us to find bugs. The fmt package offered different print formatting, verbs, and ways to control the output of the verbs by use of various flags.

With the usage of logging from Go's standard library, we were able to see details of how our application is executing. The log package allowed us to see the file path and line number that the log event took place on. The log package came with various print functions that mimic some of the fmt print functions, which provided us with various insights into the usage of the verbs we learned in this chapter. We were also able to save the logging information to a file. Each time we call a print function from the log package, it placed...