SendGrid
wild-workouts-go-ddd-example
SendGrid | wild-workouts-go-ddd-example | |
---|---|---|
4 | 30 | |
956 | 4,899 | |
0.7% | 1.3% | |
5.1 | 2.7 | |
about 2 months ago | 10 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT 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.
SendGrid
-
How to Send Emails in Go
There’s a number of resources ready to work with Go that you can utilize. Mailgun offers its own SDK for Go. SendGrid also comes with its own community-driven Go library. If Mailjet is your choice, you’ll also find numerous code samples for Golang in their REST API docs. If you prefer other platforms, you’ll likely find other user-made libraries to make integration smoother.
-
Introducing go-api-basic - another template/boilerplate RESTful web server
You're right on both of these, and I'm not settled on this at all. Struct initialization and element setting are something I haven't landed on yet for larger structs. Personally, I like the pattern like sendgrid uses for struct initialization (examples here). Using the context of my repo, seems like if they are just initializing a struct, they'd use NewMovie and if they are actually adding logic as part of the struct initialization, they'd use NewMovieInit (e.g. in their repo, NewV3Mail and NewV3MailInit).
-
Which is most efficient way to read a http response body
the email package is sendgrid go client https://github.com/sendgrid/sendgrid-go For the attachment it takes a based64 encoded string Ex:
-
What's a Library Client what you really like about their API approach?
I like https://github.com/sendgrid/sendgrid-go for Twilio's Sendgrid. I got some good ideas from it - I like the way they do initializers and give you already initialized maps and slices, etc.
wild-workouts-go-ddd-example
-
Looking for elegant code bases written in Golang
Take a look at: https://github.com/ThreeDotsLabs/wild-workouts-go-ddd-exampl...
(I’m one of the authors.)
This project shows how to apply more complex patterns popular in business applications while staying true to the Go ideas, and not copying them blindly from Java.
In the Go community, you’ll often hear people say „just keep things simple” beats all patterns and is all you need. This may be true if you write a CLI tool or a small library, but if you have a team maintaining a big application, some patterns are super helpful.
-
Accomplishing Single Responsibility Principle in my project
Here is a reference implementation by the same authors of the blog post you referenced: https://github.com/ThreeDotsLabs/wild-workouts-go-ddd-example/tree/master/internal/trainer.
- Seeking Feedback on Go API Implementation using DDD
-
In depth, complex technical implementation videos?
In this case I recommend Three Dots Labs blog and Ardan Labs courses and blog posts.
-
Yet another RealWorld implementation - Go kit, PlanetScale, sqlx, chi
As a rather new developer, I'm ashamed to admit that I struggle with this. I've seen the Dave Cheney writeup about it and I agree with your reasoning, but sometimes I end up in situations like this, where they wrote a server utility, put it into the common package and imported it into the services that need it. The issue I have is the organization of it all because the folder structure seems to make a clear separation of the core services from the utility package. If you have any ideas or tips to help avoid it, that'd be awesome!
- Go Blogs
-
As a Go programmer, what design pattern, programming techniques have you actually used, implemented regularly in your workplace which made your life much easier?
Clean architecture is not tied to some specific paradigm. It's a way of thinking about programs that is common to almost every mature developer. Many developers use it without even knowing the name - they just came to it by themselves through many tries and errors. There is a good free book about using it in Go, called Go with the Domain if you interested.
-
Is there a good example of an open source non-trivial (DB connection, authentication, authorization, data validation, tests, etc...) Go API?
Wild Workouts should match your needs: https://github.com/ThreeDotsLabs/wild-workouts-go-ddd-example
-
Where can I find well-written go code to learn from?
For Event-Driven / DDD / Microservice projects, take a look at this Github org https://github.com/ThreeDotsLabs and their blog detailing the techniques used https://threedots.tech .
-
Domain-Driven Design Framework for Go Developers
Nice job at taking a stab at DDD in Go! You may want to check out https://github.com/ThreeDotsLabs/wild-workouts-go-ddd-example for some inspiration and learning around DDD and Go.
What are some alternatives?
MailHog - Web and API based SMTP testing
clean-architecture-golang - This is my purpose of how to structure a web application in golang following the clean architecture principles
go-imap - 📥 An IMAP library for clients and servers
watermill - Building event-driven applications the easy way in Go.
go-dkim - DKIM package for golang
fx - A dependency injection based application framework for Go.
hermes - Golang package that generates clean, responsive HTML e-mails for sending transactional mail
wire - Compile-time Dependency Injection for Go
Hectane - Lightweight SMTP client written in Go
remix - Build Better Websites. Create modern, resilient user experiences with web fundamentals.
go-message - ✉️ A streaming Go library for the Internet Message Format and mail messages
eShopOnContainers - Cross-platform .NET sample microservices and container based application that runs on Linux Windows and macOS. Powered by .NET 7, Docker Containers and Azure Kubernetes Services. Supports Visual Studio, VS for Mac and CLI based environments with Docker CLI, dotnet CLI, VS Code or any other code editor. Moved to https://github.com/dotnet/eShop.