Book Image

Getting Started with V Programming

By : Navule Pavan Kumar Rao
4 (1)
Book Image

Getting Started with V Programming

4 (1)
By: Navule Pavan Kumar Rao

Overview of this book

A new language on the block, V comes with a promising set of features such as fast compilation and interoperability with other programming languages. This is the first book on the V programming language, packed with concise information and a walkthrough of all the features you need to know to get started with the language. The book begins by covering the fundamentals to help you learn about the basic features of V and the suite of built-in libraries available within the V ecosystem. You'll become familiar with primitive data types, declaring variables, arrays, and maps. In addition to basic programming, you'll develop a solid understanding of the building blocks of programming, including functions, structs, and modules in the V programming language. As you advance through the chapters, you'll learn how to implement concurrency in V Programming, and finally learn how to write test cases for functions. This book takes you through an end-to-end project that will guide you to build fast and maintainable RESTful microservices by leveraging the power of V and its built-in libraries. By the end of this V programming book, you'll be well-versed with the V programming language and be able to start writing your own programs and applications.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to the V Programming Language
4
Section 2: Basics of V Programming
12
Section 3: Advanced Concepts in V Programming

Summary

In this chapter, we learned about writing conditional blocks and iterative statements. We understood how to use the if conditional and its other flavors, such as if, if-else, and chaining multiple else-if statements. Then, we learned how the goto statement can help you to navigate to any labeled piece of code when working with if blocks. In the Conditional blocks section, in addition to the if statement, we learned about the match block. We refactored the code example that is used to implement a chained else-if statement using the match block; following this, the code looked more organized and readable. Additionally, we understood the usage of a match block as a traditional switch case and learned how to implement pattern matching with it.

This chapter also covered iterative statements in depth. We learned how to write the syntax of a basic for loop, and then we discovered how to deal with arrays and maps using a for loop. In addition to this, we explored how to reverse...