Go Cookbook: Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

About This Book
  • Discover a number of recipes and approaches to develop modern back-end applications
  • Put to use the best practices to combine the recipes for sophisticated parallel tools
  • This book is based on Go 1.8, which is the latest version
Who This Book Is For

This book is for web developers, programmers, and enterprise developers. Basic knowledge of the Go language is assumed. Experience with back-end application development is not necessary, but may help understand the motivation behind some of the recipes.

What You Will Learn
  • Test your application using advanced testing methodologies
  • Develop an awareness of application structures, interface design, and tooling
  • Create strategies for third-party packages, dependencies, and vendoring
  • Get to know tricks on treating data such as collections
  • Handle errors and cleanly pass them along to calling functions
  • Wrap dependencies in interfaces for ease of portability and testing
  • Explore reactive programming design patterns in Go
In Detail

Go (a.k.a. Golang) is a statically-typed programming language first developed at Google. It is derived from C with additional features such as garbage collection, type safety, dynamic-typing capabilities, additional built-in types, and a large standard library.

This book takes off where basic tutorials on the language leave off. You can immediately put into practice some of the more advanced concepts and libraries offered by the language while avoiding some of the common mistakes for new Go developers.

The book covers basic type and error handling. It explores applications that interact with users, such as websites, command-line tools, or via the file system. It demonstrates how to handle advanced topics such as parallelism, distributed systems, and performance tuning. Lastly, it finishes with reactive and serverless programming in Go.

Style and approach

This guide is a handy reference for developers to quickly look up Go development patterns. It is a companion to other resources and a reference that will be useful long after reading it through the first time. Each recipe includes working, simple, and tested code that can be used as a reference or foundation for your own applications.

1141916289
Go Cookbook: Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

About This Book
  • Discover a number of recipes and approaches to develop modern back-end applications
  • Put to use the best practices to combine the recipes for sophisticated parallel tools
  • This book is based on Go 1.8, which is the latest version
Who This Book Is For

This book is for web developers, programmers, and enterprise developers. Basic knowledge of the Go language is assumed. Experience with back-end application development is not necessary, but may help understand the motivation behind some of the recipes.

What You Will Learn
  • Test your application using advanced testing methodologies
  • Develop an awareness of application structures, interface design, and tooling
  • Create strategies for third-party packages, dependencies, and vendoring
  • Get to know tricks on treating data such as collections
  • Handle errors and cleanly pass them along to calling functions
  • Wrap dependencies in interfaces for ease of portability and testing
  • Explore reactive programming design patterns in Go
In Detail

Go (a.k.a. Golang) is a statically-typed programming language first developed at Google. It is derived from C with additional features such as garbage collection, type safety, dynamic-typing capabilities, additional built-in types, and a large standard library.

This book takes off where basic tutorials on the language leave off. You can immediately put into practice some of the more advanced concepts and libraries offered by the language while avoiding some of the common mistakes for new Go developers.

The book covers basic type and error handling. It explores applications that interact with users, such as websites, command-line tools, or via the file system. It demonstrates how to handle advanced topics such as parallelism, distributed systems, and performance tuning. Lastly, it finishes with reactive and serverless programming in Go.

Style and approach

This guide is a handy reference for developers to quickly look up Go development patterns. It is a companion to other resources and a reference that will be useful long after reading it through the first time. Each recipe includes working, simple, and tested code that can be used as a reference or foundation for your own applications.

39.99 In Stock
Go Cookbook: Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

Go Cookbook: Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

by Aaron Torres
Go Cookbook: Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

Go Cookbook: Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

by Aaron Torres

eBook

$39.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Bridge the gap between basic understanding of Go and use of its advanced features

About This Book
  • Discover a number of recipes and approaches to develop modern back-end applications
  • Put to use the best practices to combine the recipes for sophisticated parallel tools
  • This book is based on Go 1.8, which is the latest version
Who This Book Is For

This book is for web developers, programmers, and enterprise developers. Basic knowledge of the Go language is assumed. Experience with back-end application development is not necessary, but may help understand the motivation behind some of the recipes.

What You Will Learn
  • Test your application using advanced testing methodologies
  • Develop an awareness of application structures, interface design, and tooling
  • Create strategies for third-party packages, dependencies, and vendoring
  • Get to know tricks on treating data such as collections
  • Handle errors and cleanly pass them along to calling functions
  • Wrap dependencies in interfaces for ease of portability and testing
  • Explore reactive programming design patterns in Go
In Detail

Go (a.k.a. Golang) is a statically-typed programming language first developed at Google. It is derived from C with additional features such as garbage collection, type safety, dynamic-typing capabilities, additional built-in types, and a large standard library.

This book takes off where basic tutorials on the language leave off. You can immediately put into practice some of the more advanced concepts and libraries offered by the language while avoiding some of the common mistakes for new Go developers.

The book covers basic type and error handling. It explores applications that interact with users, such as websites, command-line tools, or via the file system. It demonstrates how to handle advanced topics such as parallelism, distributed systems, and performance tuning. Lastly, it finishes with reactive and serverless programming in Go.

Style and approach

This guide is a handy reference for developers to quickly look up Go development patterns. It is a companion to other resources and a reference that will be useful long after reading it through the first time. Each recipe includes working, simple, and tested code that can be used as a reference or foundation for your own applications.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781783286843
Publisher: Packt Publishing
Publication date: 06/28/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 400
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Aaron Torres received his master's of science degree in computer science from New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology. He has worked on distributed systems in high performance computing and in large-scale web and microservices applications. He currently leads a team of Go developers that refines and focuses on Go best practices with an emphasis on continuous delivery and automated testing.
Aaron has published a number of papers and has several patents in the area of storage and I/O. He is passionate about sharing his knowledge and ideas with others. He is also a huge fan of the Go language and open source for backend systems and development.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews