go-c2dmc
go-structure-examples
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go-c2dmc | go-structure-examples | |
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5 | 16 | |
8 | 2,301 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
almost 2 years ago | 12 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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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.
go-c2dmc
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Share Your Code.. Share your most unique piece of Go code.
I also built go-c2dmc, a package utilizing the go-colorful library to compute the nearest-matching DMC thread (thread for sewing, cross stitching, etc.) color to RGB and other color-space values (such as LAB and HSV). I haven’t touched it in quite some time, but I’m also planning on adding the ability to select from pre-defined color pallets to match to, as well as creating custom color pallets to match to.
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New Open source Go projects looking for contributors
I don’t have a contributor guide written for either of them, but feel free to help with the few issues in either this or this package I’ve written and released. They’re super simple things, but I’ve been rather busy at work and in life. So I haven’t had the time to address them. If you want to contribute, feel free to send me a DM with any questions!! Otherwise, just fork the repo(s) and just open a PR once you’re ready for the changes to be merged. I’ll review it asap!!
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Next month I'll start working at a company as a Backend Developer and will be mostly using Go. How can I better prepare myself?
As far as projects to study go, I’ll start off with a shameless plug of two Go packages I’ve written, myself. This one is for converting between RGB (and other color space formats) to the nearest matching DMC thread color. This one is admittedly an extremely unidiomatic package (it’s completely opposite of how you should do things in Go) for supporting dynamic queries in Go without headaches or pre-defining “model” structs to hold each row of your query results. It’s something that can be useful, but it’s also built to showcase making the language work for a use case it wasn’t originally meant to support. If you wanna take a look at them, feel free. Also, I suggest looking at the testify repo. It’s an EXTREMELY popular testing library, and it’s also structured well.
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Open source Go projects to contribute (beginners)
I’m the creator of https://github.com/syke99/go-c2dmc a Go package for converting RGBA, LAB, and Hexcode color values to the nearest matching DMC thread color. It’s a bit niche of a package, and it’s been a few months since I’ve worked on it, but I’m always open to contributors and maintainers joining the project. If anyone would like to contribute and/or be a maintainer, DM me and we can discuss more
- Created my first ever Go package!!
go-structure-examples
- How often do you use OOP design patterns while writing Go?
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Hexagonal architecture and mocking
I have a question, I am trying out hexagonal architecture for one of my projects trying to follow this repository example and I ran into a slight problem.
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Extra tool using main applications Go Ent structure question
Just fyi, that repo is NOT considered standard, and in fact, is often advised against. The structure of your code should depend on its complexity and how interoperable with other projects you need/would like it to be. I suggest watching this talk on structuring your code and taking a look at this companion repo to decide which will be the best way to structure your code, depending on your needs
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Package Organization Approaches in Go
Kat Zien's excellent talk, presentation and code samples can be found here.
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Go package&filename convention question from a Java developer
Thanks for the video, I'll take a look at it. And I checked the repo, I liked how the new is structured: https://github.com/katzien/go-structure-examples/tree/master/new
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Next month I'll start working at a company as a Backend Developer and will be mostly using Go. How can I better prepare myself?
So here’s where I normally tell people to start off: check out this video and this repo in regards to the main 6 ways of architecting your Go applications.
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how to structure a project?
Watch this and give this repo a look.
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DDD file structure & cyclic dependencies
Am I completely fumbling it by approaching this the wrong way & if so what should I do differently? I have searched a few repos like this which redefines the same entity in multiple places which I feel is a violation of some sort, and this which the author had to resort to moving some files outside to overcome a circular dependency (see comments inside their handling.go file).
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Is there any conventionally accepted repo that is representative of well designed go code ?
Really surprised I haven’t seen katzien/go-structure-example and her GopherCon 2018 talk about structuring your Go projects mentioned yet
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Building a REST API with GO, Gin framework, and GORM.
Let's agree to leave the MVC model for OO languages. A better architecture would be something like katzien/go-structure-examples
What are some alternatives?
access-key-rotator - A PoC how to rotate your IAM access keys and store them in Github secrets
fx - A dependency injection based application framework for Go.
rss-bot - Telegram bot for RSS feeds
go-clean-template - Clean Architecture template for Golang services
lrpc - Simple, lightweight, multi-codec RPC library for Go.
golang-standards/project-layout - Standard Go Project Layout
keploy - Test generation for Developers. Generate tests and stubs for your application that actually work!
waypoint - A tool to build, deploy, and release any application on any platform.
geos - Geometry Engine, Open Source
JSON2App
full-house - A simple web based Planning Poker implementation.
todo-api-microservice-example - Go microservice tutorial project using Domain Driven Design and Onion Architecture!