The Go Bestiary: Bugs, gotchas and guidelines for go programmers


The Go Bestiary: Bugs, gotchas and guidelines for go programmers by Kenneth Grant
English | 8 Oct. 2017 | ISBN: 1549928376 | ASIN: B07696DMDF | 150 Pages | AZW3 | 217.75 KB





The Go language is deceptively simple, with only 25 keywords and few data structures, and the syntax is very like other languages in the C family. This means programmers coming from other languages like Java or C find it easy to get started, but sometimes feel the lack of familiar tools which Go simply leaves out – inheritance, assertions, exceptions, the ternary operator, enums, and generics are all missing by design.

The Go Bestiary lets a programmer who has some experience in other languages get up to speed quickly in Go, while being aware of the idioms, problems and possible bugs lurking in their new Go code. This book presents a mix of advice for structuring your Go programs and descriptions of common mistakes to avoid, with liberal code examples. Typically Go programmers get up to speed quickly and feel productive within days or weeks, but it can be harder to learn the culture and edge cases of the language.

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