free-gophers-pack VS gophers

Compare free-gophers-pack vs gophers and see what are their differences.

free-gophers-pack

✨ This pack of 100+ gopher pictures and elements will help you to build own design of almost anything related to Go Programming Language: presentations, posts in blogs or social media, courses, videos and many, many more. (by MariaLetta)

gophers

Gopher Artwork by Ashley McNamara (by ashleymcnamara)
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free-gophers-pack gophers
3 4
3,253 2,907
- -
10.0 0.0
over 1 year ago about 5 years ago
Go Go
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal GNU General Public License v3.0 or later
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.

free-gophers-pack

Posts with mentions or reviews of free-gophers-pack. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2024-04-17.
  • Using migrations with Golang
    5 projects | dev.to | 17 Apr 2024
    Gopher credits
  • Behind the Scenes of Go Scheduler
    2 projects | dev.to | 19 Mar 2022
    OK, no more surprises. I promised with that, we now have a full understanding of the main ideas, both big and sneaky, behind the Go scheduler. We started out with a list of goals. How did we do with our goals? Use a small number of kernel threads. We can support high concurrency and we can leverage parallelism. We scale to N-cores and this falls out of those three ideas that we discussed. Let's move on to the harder questions. What are the limitations of the scheduler? Well, for one, there is no notion of goroutine's priority. It uses a first in, first out runQueue vs Linux scheduler which uses a priority queue. Now the cost-benefit tradeoff is doing this might not actually make sense for go programs. The second limitation is there's no strong preemption, so there is no strong fairness in latency guarantees. It's entirely possible for a goroutine in certain cases to bring the inspire system to slow down in a fault. And finally, the third limitation that I want to touch upon today is the scheduler is not aware of the actual hardware topology, so there's no real guaranteed locality between the data and the Goroutine computation, and with that we have come to an end and thank you for reading. Gopher Artwork credit Maria Letta Ashley Mcnamara
  • Generate an NFT Collection in Go
    1 project | /r/golang | 27 Feb 2022
    I used the Gophers from here - https://github.com/MariaLetta/free-gophers-pack/ and did give a credit to the author in the video and put a link in the description

gophers

Posts with mentions or reviews of gophers. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-03-19.
  • Golang Desktop wallpapers
    1 project | /r/golang | 20 Aug 2022
    Old but still nice ones : https://github.com/ashleymcnamara/gophers
  • Behind the Scenes of Go Scheduler
    2 projects | dev.to | 19 Mar 2022
    OK, no more surprises. I promised with that, we now have a full understanding of the main ideas, both big and sneaky, behind the Go scheduler. We started out with a list of goals. How did we do with our goals? Use a small number of kernel threads. We can support high concurrency and we can leverage parallelism. We scale to N-cores and this falls out of those three ideas that we discussed. Let's move on to the harder questions. What are the limitations of the scheduler? Well, for one, there is no notion of goroutine's priority. It uses a first in, first out runQueue vs Linux scheduler which uses a priority queue. Now the cost-benefit tradeoff is doing this might not actually make sense for go programs. The second limitation is there's no strong preemption, so there is no strong fairness in latency guarantees. It's entirely possible for a goroutine in certain cases to bring the inspire system to slow down in a fault. And finally, the third limitation that I want to touch upon today is the scheduler is not aware of the actual hardware topology, so there's no real guaranteed locality between the data and the Goroutine computation, and with that we have come to an end and thank you for reading. Gopher Artwork credit Maria Letta Ashley Mcnamara
  • Seeking memes 😅
    2 projects | /r/golang | 25 Aug 2021
    https://github.com/ashleymcnamara/gophers is pretty awesome
  • go startpack
    8 projects | dev.to | 15 Jul 2021
    Gopher Artwork by Ashley MacNamara

What are some alternatives?

When comparing free-gophers-pack and gophers you can also consider the following projects:

gokoban - 3D Puzzle Game written in Go

apex

purplecrayon - An SVG library for GoLang

HighPerformanceWithGo - Writing High Performant Golang Programs

social-icons - Collection of SVG & PNG social media icons. Embeddable Social Icons, Use directly on your websites.

snowflake - Snowflake is a network service for generating unique ID numbers at high scale with some simple guarantees.

vector-search-class-notes - Class notes for the course "Long Term Memory in AI - Vector Search and Databases" COS 597A @ Princeton Fall 2023

helm - The Kubernetes Package Manager [Moved to: https://github.com/helm/helm]

indigo - Go source code for Bluesky's atproto services.

gophers - Some gophers 🐻

pure - a blog based on github discussion

grupo-estudos-golang - Material para estudo de Golang, tutoriais, videos e exemplos para quem quer aprender Go