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example | goimports | |
---|---|---|
7 | 46 | |
2,455 | 7,207 | |
1.0% | 0.7% | |
6.7 | 9.9 | |
3 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
example
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A decade of developing a programming language
I'm in the same boat as you -- here are the two best resources I found:
https://mukulrathi.com/create-your-own-programming-language/...
https://jaked.org/blog/2021-09-07-Reconstructing-TypeScript-...
I read through the first 10 chapters of TAPL, and skimmed the rest. The first 10 chapters were good to remind myself of the framing. But as far as I can tell, all the stuff I care about is stuffed into one chapter (chapter 11 I think), and the rest isn't that relevant (type inference stuff that is not mainstream AFAIK)
This is also good:
https://github.com/golang/example/blob/master/gotypes/README...
And yeah I think we had the same conversation on Reddit -- somebody needs to make a Crafting Interpreters for type checking :) Preferably with OOP and functional and nominal/structural.
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Slog: Zero-dependency structured logging in Go
A guide covering how to write custom handlers is out of scope for this post, but you can find one such guide written by the author of slog here. Thankfully, you don’t need to write a handler from scratch to use one. There are several community-contributed handlers, including handlers that allow you to output colored logs, and a handler that lets you implement sampling. You can find a full list here.
- A Guide to Writing Slog Handlers
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[blog post] Ten challenges for Rust
I am not too familiar with how Go does things, but it, eg, exposes Go type-checker via stdlib: https://github.com/golang/example/tree/master/gotypes. Similarly, I believe gofmt uses the ast package from stdlib, rather private compiler internals like rustfmt.
- go/types: The Go Type Checker
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Can't get gopls to work with nvim-lsp
So I just cloned this git repo https://github.com/golang/example and as soon as I entered the hello/hello.go file I was able to get autocomplete and error checking. I don't understand why it isn't working with just a .go file I made.
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I'm not sure where to begin. I find programming exhausting.
GitHub repsoitories: - https://github.com/golang/example - https://github.com/gothinkster/flask-realworld-example-app - https://github.com/gothinkster/rails-realworld-example-app
goimports
- Gopls/v0.15.0
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How to find all methods which return struct "Foo" (vscode or cli)
Just a guess, but it might be somewhere in gopls https://github.com/golang/tools/tree/master/gopls/doc On this page https://langserver.org/ it says it should support "finding references"
- Major rewrite of gopls released (2 weeks ago)
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What LSP are y'all using?
Language server protocol. Here’s a good one: https://github.com/golang/tools/blob/master/gopls/README.md
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Can Someone Explain To Me Like I'm 5
gopls was not able to find modules in your workspace.When outside of GOPATH, gopls needs to know which modules you are working on.You can fix this by opening your workspace to a folder inside a Go module, orby using a go.work file to specify multiple modules.See the documentation for more information on setting up your workspace:https://github.com/golang/tools/blob/master/gopls/doc/workspace.md.
- Latest gopls version still v0.11.0 from December 22?
- GitHub - orijtech/structslop: structslop is a static analyzer for Go that recommends struct field rearrangements to provide for maximum space/allocation efficiency.
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betteralign - structs field alignment static analyzer for Go
For more gopls settings, you can see files in this folder: https://github.com/golang/tools/tree/master/gopls/doc
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Linter for explicit hint to interface which gets implemented.
But finding which interface is satisfied by a type is trivial anyways through gopls which integrates conveniently into any LSP supporting IDE (such as VSCode and Goland).
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Setting up helix for golang
You need to make sure you have Google's lsp server for golang installed.
What are some alternatives?
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
gofumpt - A stricter gofmt
slog-sampling - 🚨 slog sampling: drop repetitive log records
pattern-matching-in-rust - Pattern matching and exhaustiveness checking algorithms implemented in Rust
goreturns - A gofmt/goimports-like tool for Go programmers that fills in Go return statements with zero values to match the func return types
fyg-lang - Fyg is a simple high-level, functional-imperative with runtime type safety for the aspiring grug
GoLint - [mirror] This is a linter for Go source code. (deprecated)
hm - a simple Hindley-Milner type system in Go
staticcheck
golines - A golang formatter that fixes long lines
go-checkstyle - checkstyle for go