gopl.io
golangci-lint
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gopl.io | golangci-lint | |
---|---|---|
57 | 72 | |
7,372 | 14,427 | |
- | 2.1% | |
0.0 | 9.7 | |
2 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
gopl.io
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Good Books for a GO Beginner in 2023/24
Go never changed as much as Java does in each major release, so old books are still relevant. https://www.gopl.io/ is fine if you read about generics and some new standard library modules somewhere else later.
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Step by Step process to learn Golang
The Go Programming Language book.
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Is go worth studying as first language?
The GOPL book is good one to start with, if you prefer reading books. https://www.gopl.io/
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Does anyone have any good resources to practice channel, context, and goroutine?
Not that they are leet code style, but some exercises from "The Go Programming Language" are really worth having a look at, also most solutions are available at https://github.com/adonovan/gopl.io
- Best way to learn GoLang for Java Developers?
- How similar is GO to C?
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is go still simple?
What part(s) are you struggling with and how are you learning? The Go Programming Language is slightly outdated but is an excellent intro. You can read the first chapter free. Also the resources on https://go.dev/learn/ are great. If I were you, I would come up with an idea you're excited about and build it.
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Learning about concurrency
For a deeper dive, Iād recommend The Go Programming Language - a fantastic resource covering a broader landscape of the language than just concurrency.
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If you want to learn Golang - please go through "Go Programming Language" by Brian Kernighan and Alan Donovan
"Low-level programming" is chapter 13, both in the version I have and on https://www.gopl.io/ -- the rest is all somewhat crucial stuff, except for maybe reflection.
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Career Change to Go
Is this the "The Go Programming Language" you mentioned?
golangci-lint
- makefile para projetos em Go
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Finding unreachable functions with deadcode ā The Go Programming Language
One of the checkers in golangci-lint does this. I forget which one.
golangci-lint rolls up lot of linters and checkers into a single binary.
There is a config file too.
https://github.com/golangci/golangci-lint
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Using Private Go Modules with golangci-lint in GitHub Actions
golangci-lint is an amazing open-source tool for CI in Go projects. Basically, it's an aggregator and a Go linters runner that makes life easier for developers. It includes all the well-known liners by default but also provides an easy way to integrate new ones.
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ļøšØāš§ 3 Tiny Fixes You Can Make To Start Contributing to Any Open Source Project š
Fun fact: We actually use a code linter via golangci-linter to catch misspellings in code/comments using client9/misspell.
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Show HN: Error return traces for Go, inspired by Zig
The "standard linter" in Go is https://golangci-lint.run/ , which includes [1] the absolutely-vital errcheck which will do that for you.
For an Advent of Code challenge you may want to turn off a lot of other things, since the linter is broadly tuned for production, public code by default and you're creating burner code and don't care whether or not you have godoc comments for your functions, for instance. But I suggest using golangci-lint rather than errcheck directly because there's some other things you may find useful, like ineffassign, exportloopref, etc.
[1]: https://golangci-lint.run/usage/linters/
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Hacking Go to give it sum types
golangci-lint recently integrated go-check-sumtype. I recommend using golangci-lint as a pre-commit hook, but if you're in a real hurry you can replace "go build" with a shell script that runs go-check-sumtype instead. This is probably better than a weird hack, not that you're saying that the weird hack is a good idea anyhow.
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Building RESTful API with Hexagonal Architecture in Go
Golangci-lint is a tool for checking Go code quality, finding issues, bugs, and style problems. It helps keep the code clean and maintainable.
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Structured Logging with Slog
This is such an infuriating problem. I'm convinced I'm using Go wrong, because I simply can't understand how this doesn't make it a toy language. Why the $expletive am I wasting 20-30 and more minutes per week of my life looking for the source of an error!?
Have you seen https://github.com/tomarrell/wrapcheck? It's a linter than does a fairly good job of warning when an error originates from an external package but hasn't been wrapped in your codebase to make it unique or stacktraced. It comes with https://github.com/golangci/golangci-lint and can even be made part of your in-editor LSP diagnostics.
But still, it's not perfect. And so I remain convinced that I'm misunderstanding something fundamental about the language because not being able to consistently find the source of an error is such an egregious failing for a programming language.
- golangci-lint 1.54.0 is released
- Seeking Insights: Tools Used in GitHub Actions for Security Code Checks and Vulnerability Detection
What are some alternatives?
golang-cheat-sheet - An overview of Go syntax and features.
ireturn - Accept Interfaces, Return Concrete Types
maturin - Build and publish crates with pyo3, cffi and uniffi bindings as well as rust binaries as python packages
gosec - Go security checker
go101 - An up-to-date (unofficial) knowledge base for Go programming self learning
golangci-lint-action - Official GitHub action for golangci-lint from its authors
learn-go-with-tests - Learn Go with test-driven development
go - The Go programming language
GoBooks - List of Golang books
ls-lint - An extremely fast directory and filename linter - Bring some structure to your project filesystem
gobyexample - Go by Example
staticcheck