handlers
schema
handlers | schema | |
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4 | 1 | |
1,509 | 1,160 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" 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.
handlers
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Go Gin vs Echo Thoughts/ Opinions
When you use a router that supports http.Handler you don't have to worry about maintaining special middleware for that library. There are so many well maintained middleware libraries for the http.Handler like https://github.com/gorilla/handlers
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Noob here. Need recommendation for best REST API framework.
To add to this, gorilla also offers some middleware. And its super easy to import your own and wrap it.
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Go is not an easy language
Study the generic reader/writer implementations in the io module. (On my system, those sources are in /usr/lib/go/src/io.) The io.Reader and io.Writer interfaces are very simple, but very powerful because of how they allow composition. A shell pipeline like `cat somefile.dat | base64 -d | gzip -d | jq .` can be quite directly translated into chained io.Readers and io.Writers.
Another example of this is how HTTP middlewares chain together, see for example all the middlewares in https://github.com/gorilla/handlers. All of these exhibit one particular quality of idiomatic Go code: a preference for composition over inheritance.
Another quality of idiomatic Go code is that concurrent algorithms prefer channels over locking mechanisms (unless the performance penalty of using channels is too severe). I don't have immediate examples coming to mind on this one though, since the use of channels and mutexes tends to be quite intertwined with the algorithm in question.
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Securing a Go-Backed Scrappy Twitter API with Magic
gorilla/handlers
schema
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When to use Golang over Python for web app backend?
gorilla/schema - Parsing form data into structs
What are some alternatives?
go-patterns - Curated list of Go design patterns, recipes and idioms
qs - Go module for encoding structs into URL query parameters
chi - lightweight, idiomatic and composable router for building Go HTTP services
binding - Reflectionless data binding for Go's net/http (not actively maintained)
scrappy-twitter-api-server - Scrappy Twitter API is a Go-backend project that is secured by the Magic SDK. This Go server allows all users to READ tweets. However, to POST or DELETE tweets an access token is required. This access token can be generated via https://scrappy-twitter-api-client-xi.vercel.app/.
sqlx - general purpose extensions to golang's database/sql
sessions - Package gorilla/sessions provides cookie and filesystem sessions and infrastructure for custom session backends.
ent - An entity framework for Go
bind
Goyave - 🍐 Elegant Golang REST API Framework (v5 release candidate available)
websocket - A fast, well-tested and widely used WebSocket implementation for Go.