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Domain-Driven Design with Golang

Domain-Driven Design with Golang

By : Matthew Boyle
4.4 (19)
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Domain-Driven Design with Golang

Domain-Driven Design with Golang

4.4 (19)
By: Matthew Boyle

Overview of this book

Domain-driven design (DDD) is one of the most sought-after skills in the industry. This book provides you with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts and practical examples that will see you introducing DDD in your Go projects in no time. Domain-Driven Design with Golang starts by helping you gain a basic understanding of DDD, and then covers all the important patterns, such as bounded context, ubiquitous language, and aggregates. The latter half of the book deals with the real-world implementation of DDD patterns and teaches you how to build two systems while applying DDD principles, which will be a valuable addition to your portfolio. Finally, you’ll find out how to build a microservice, along with learning how DDD-based microservices can be part of a greater distributed system. Although the focus of this book is Golang, by the end of this book you’ll be able to confidently use DDD patterns outside of Go and apply them to other languages and even distributed systems.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Introduction to Domain-Driven Design
6
Part 2: Real -World Domain-Driven Design with Golang

Eric Evans and DDD

Evans’s book (sometimes called the Big Blue Book) has become a must-read title for all software engineers and architects. Whenever we talk about DDD, this is the book that started it all. In the book, he gave a common language and a set of principles to design systems that have been refined and clarified over the years by members of an ever-growing community.

The Big Blue Book has sold over 100,000 copies and consistently remains in the top 10 computing books on Amazon. Martin Fowler, a famous thought leader in the software engineering space, describes the book as “an essential read for serious software engineers” (in his martinFowler.com blog, 2020: https://martinfowler.com/bliki/DomainDrivenDesign.html).

However, the book is not without flaws. It has received criticism for being hard to read. In his review, Matt Carroll states: “The book is written in a dialect approaching that of academia. Big words, long sentences, and introduction to concepts that are so abstract that they would be unintelligible without the accompanying examples. In fact, some parts continue to be unintelligible even with the examples” (in his Medium blog, 2016: https://mattcarroll.medium.com/book-review-domain-driven-design-42c96a75a72).

Regardless of the criticism, the book is still as relevant and celebrated as it was years ago when it was published. One reason is that the book outlined three pillars that can be used independently or together to improve complex software projects. In the next section, we will review these pillars.

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