Book Image

The Go Workshop

By : Delio D'Anna, Andrew Hayes, Sam Hennessy, Jeremy Leasor, Gobin Sougrakpam, Dániel Szabó
5 (2)
Book Image

The Go Workshop

5 (2)
By: Delio D'Anna, Andrew Hayes, Sam Hennessy, Jeremy Leasor, Gobin Sougrakpam, Dániel Szabó

Overview of this book

The Go Workshop will take the pain out of learning the Go programming language (also known as Golang). It is designed to teach you to be productive in building real-world software. Presented in an engaging, hands-on way, this book focuses on the features of Go that are used by professionals in their everyday work. Each concept is broken down, clearly explained, and followed up with activities to test your knowledge and build your practical skills. Your first steps will involve mastering Go syntax, working with variables and operators, and using core and complex types to hold data. Moving ahead, you will build your understanding of programming logic and implement Go algorithms to construct useful functions. As you progress, you'll discover how to handle errors, debug code to troubleshoot your applications, and implement polymorphism using interfaces. The later chapters will then teach you how to manage files, connect to a database, work with HTTP servers and REST APIs, and make use of concurrent programming. Throughout this Workshop, you'll work on a series of mini projects, including a shopping cart, a loan calculator, a working hours tracker, a web page counter, a code checker, and a user authentication system. By the end of this book, you'll have the knowledge and confidence to tackle your own ambitious projects with Go.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
1. Variables and Operators
2
2. Logic and Loops

The Importance of Concurrency

So far, we've seen how to use concurrency to split the work over several Goroutines, but in all these exercises concurrency was not really needed. In fact, you do not save much time doing what we did, nor do you have any other advantage. Concurrency is important when you need to perform several tasks that are logically independent from each other, and the easiest case to understand is a web server. You saw in Chapter 15, HTTP Servers, that several clients will most likely connect to the same server and all these connections will result in the server performing some actions. Also, these actions are all independent; that's where concurrency is important, as you do not want one of your users to have to wait for all the other HTTP requests to be completed before their request gets handled. Another case for concurrency is when you have different data sources to gather data and you can actually gather that data in different routines and combine the...