fsm
golang-set
fsm | golang-set | |
---|---|---|
1 | 6 | |
2,777 | 4,077 | |
1.9% | - | |
2.9 | 3.6 | |
28 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
fsm
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Let it crash or handle the error gracefully?
I'm reevaluating some of my practices in Go and one of them is the idea of verifying everything before usage to prevent runtime panics. For example, how do you ensure something is properly initialized before it's used? I was thinking on introducing a state machine to controllm this kind of thigs. What do you think? https://github.com/looplab/fsm
golang-set
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Is there something similar to blessed.rs ?
If it were true, there wouldn't be any 3rd-party libs for Go and everybody used just the stdlib. For instance, if you need a set, you can use https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set . Of course, you can do it with the stdlib with map, but if you don't want to do that, use golang-set . I think Python has a much larger stdlib and yet, Python has tons of 3rd-party packages.
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Any major projects using generics?
golang-set is a set implementation used by docker, ethereum and others. 2.8k stars on GitHub. Pretty popular project. Not sure if it counts as major. https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set
- When will Go get sets?
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Does anyone else get tired of the "that's trivial to implement" excuse for leaving things out of the standard library?
Why not look at something like https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set ?
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Go 1.18 Released
It depends on the level of abstraction you're addressing. One level may be "i need to store things with a quick search function", another may be "i need a storage of ordered names and expiry date for things", etc until you get to "I need a binary tree which orders by comparable types".
Where you split that process as a separate library you either decide to write or reuse - that becomes the problem to solve. A set implementation may be a problem to solve: https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set A btree may be a problem to solve: https://gitlab.com/cznic/b/-/tree/master/v2
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Major update to the golang-set repo now supporting generics syntax for Go 1.18beta1 release
This pre-release only exists on the generics branch at: https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set/tree/generics. Eventually this release would be tagged with a 2.0 release tag name.
What are some alternatives?
bitmap - Simple dense bitmap index in Go with binary operators
gods - GoDS (Go Data Structures) - Sets, Lists, Stacks, Maps, Trees, Queues, and much more
gocache - ☔️ A complete Go cache library that brings you multiple ways of managing your caches
go-adaptive-radix-tree - Adaptive Radix Trees implemented in Go
binpacker - A binary stream packer and unpacker
gota - Gota: DataFrames and data wrangling in Go (Golang)
pipeline - Pipelines using goroutines
ttlcache - An in-memory cache with item expiration and generics [Moved to: https://github.com/jellydator/ttlcache]
trie - Data structure and relevant algorithms for extremely fast prefix/fuzzy string searching.
encoding - Integer Compression Libraries for Go
bitset - Go package implementing bitsets