This Is Why You Should Learn Golang

Photo by Dun Liu on KindPNG

Introduction

Golang is one of the youngest programming languages. Until this post is published, the current stable Golang version is 1.17.2. Besides that, it is considered a popular programming language amongst developers. It can be built and run on many platforms and environments (Sorry, Java), bundled with solid and supportive built-in packages, and many more.

I use Golang due to the lack of magic of the language, verbose, structured, and clean. Within this article, you are going to discover reasons why you should consider learning Golang. I’m not going to compare Golang with other programming languages because I think that will end in smoke. So let’s start with the language structure itself.

Language Structure

package main
import (
  "errors"
  "fmt"
)
type Numbers []int
func (n Numbers) Repeat() error {
  if n == nil {
    return errors.New("Numbers is nil")
  }
  for i, e := range n {
    fmt.Printf("%02d => %3d\n", i+1, e)
  }
  return nil
}
func main() {
  if err := Numbers(nil).Repeat(); err != nil {
    fmt.Println(err)
  }
  _ = Numbers([]int{1, 99, 100}).Repeat()
}

I will not cover all the language syntax, but the code above is an example of Golang’s code. You don’t need to understand it right now, but you can learn the structure of the code starts from the package and import as a code scope, func main as an entry point, if-else and for loop as one of the control structure, types, nil, errors, etc.

It is strictly typed, using curly braces as scope even though you only write a single line of control structure, using nil instead of null (you save 1 character here), and only using a semicolon to separate statements, not to ends it. All that said, Golang’s syntax is beginner-friendly, at least that’s what I thought.

You won’t be afraid of writing a dirty code syntax or whatsoever, because not only Golang has its guide to writing it better, it also has its own linter and formatter that tells you what variable is unused built right in. And that’s what you’re gonna know about.

Built-in Support

Golang brings its own tools to build a great application. Linter? Formatter? Tester? You named it. It also has a garbage collector, natively support concurrency, and a playground. Besides that, Golang also has supportive built-in packages. You can write a web application, command-line interface application, and even a Web Assembly application without any third-party module. But, what if you want to create a Golang module? Let’s talk about it.

Module

You can create a Golang module easily both local and remote. Just execute go mod init <module-name> and then just code like usual. Golang module support git out of the box, you can just push your Golang module to a git repository, and then import it into your code. For example, if you want to import a Postgres plugin or my database credential rotator module, you can import it just by typing the git repo name.

import (
  "context"
  "database/sql"
  "log"
  "time"
  "github.com/ClavinJune/rotator"
  "github.com/lib/pq"
)

Build Result

Binary! Golang builds your code into a binary. If you are on Windows, it will build your code into executable files, if you are on Linux it will build an ELF file, and so on. Also, you can control the build by only using an Environment variable. Let’s say you are on a Linux machine, but you want to create an executable file for windows, just tell it so.

$ ls
main.go
$ GOOS=windows GOARCH=amd64 go build main.go
$ file main.exe
main.exe: PE32+ executable (console) x86-64 (stripped to external PDB), for MS Windows
$ GOOS=darwin GOARCH=amd64 go build main.go
$ file main
main: Mach-O 64-bit x86_64 executable

You can also create a Web Assembly module:

$ GOOS=js GOARCH=wasm go build -o main.wasm main.go
$ file main.wasm
main.wasm: WebAssembly (wasm) binary module version 0x1 (MVP)

Conclusion

I know that I’m not covering all the language specifications. All the reasons above are quite subjective to me as a developer, you may find your interests in Golang by referring to the FAQ page or the specification page. Also, Golang is on its way to the 2nd version which will support Generic and better error handling.

Thank you for reading!

Originally published at https://clavinjune.dev on October 27, 2021.


This Is Why You Should Learn Golang was originally published in Level Up Coding on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


This content originally appeared on Level Up Coding - Medium and was authored by Clavin June

Photo by Dun Liu on KindPNG

Introduction

Golang is one of the youngest programming languages. Until this post is published, the current stable Golang version is 1.17.2. Besides that, it is considered a popular programming language amongst developers. It can be built and run on many platforms and environments (Sorry, Java), bundled with solid and supportive built-in packages, and many more.

I use Golang due to the lack of magic of the language, verbose, structured, and clean. Within this article, you are going to discover reasons why you should consider learning Golang. I’m not going to compare Golang with other programming languages because I think that will end in smoke. So let’s start with the language structure itself.

Language Structure

package main
import (
  "errors"
  "fmt"
)
type Numbers []int
func (n Numbers) Repeat() error {
  if n == nil {
    return errors.New("Numbers is nil")
  }
  for i, e := range n {
    fmt.Printf("%02d => %3d\n", i+1, e)
  }
  return nil
}
func main() {
  if err := Numbers(nil).Repeat(); err != nil {
    fmt.Println(err)
  }
  _ = Numbers([]int{1, 99, 100}).Repeat()
}

I will not cover all the language syntax, but the code above is an example of Golang’s code. You don’t need to understand it right now, but you can learn the structure of the code starts from the package and import as a code scope, func main as an entry point, if-else and for loop as one of the control structure, types, nil, errors, etc.

It is strictly typed, using curly braces as scope even though you only write a single line of control structure, using nil instead of null (you save 1 character here), and only using a semicolon to separate statements, not to ends it. All that said, Golang's syntax is beginner-friendly, at least that's what I thought.

You won’t be afraid of writing a dirty code syntax or whatsoever, because not only Golang has its guide to writing it better, it also has its own linter and formatter that tells you what variable is unused built right in. And that's what you're gonna know about.

Built-in Support

Golang brings its own tools to build a great application. Linter? Formatter? Tester? You named it. It also has a garbage collector, natively support concurrency, and a playground. Besides that, Golang also has supportive built-in packages. You can write a web application, command-line interface application, and even a Web Assembly application without any third-party module. But, what if you want to create a Golang module? Let's talk about it.

Module

You can create a Golang module easily both local and remote. Just execute go mod init <module-name> and then just code like usual. Golang module support git out of the box, you can just push your Golang module to a git repository, and then import it into your code. For example, if you want to import a Postgres plugin or my database credential rotator module, you can import it just by typing the git repo name.

import (
  "context"
  "database/sql"
  "log"
  "time"
  "github.com/ClavinJune/rotator"
  "github.com/lib/pq"
)

Build Result

Binary! Golang builds your code into a binary. If you are on Windows, it will build your code into executable files, if you are on Linux it will build an ELF file, and so on. Also, you can control the build by only using an Environment variable. Let’s say you are on a Linux machine, but you want to create an executable file for windows, just tell it so.

$ ls
main.go
$ GOOS=windows GOARCH=amd64 go build main.go
$ file main.exe
main.exe: PE32+ executable (console) x86-64 (stripped to external PDB), for MS Windows
$ GOOS=darwin GOARCH=amd64 go build main.go
$ file main
main: Mach-O 64-bit x86_64 executable

You can also create a Web Assembly module:

$ GOOS=js GOARCH=wasm go build -o main.wasm main.go
$ file main.wasm
main.wasm: WebAssembly (wasm) binary module version 0x1 (MVP)

Conclusion

I know that I’m not covering all the language specifications. All the reasons above are quite subjective to me as a developer, you may find your interests in Golang by referring to the FAQ page or the specification page. Also, Golang is on its way to the 2nd version which will support Generic and better error handling.

Thank you for reading!

Originally published at https://clavinjune.dev on October 27, 2021.


This Is Why You Should Learn Golang was originally published in Level Up Coding on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


This content originally appeared on Level Up Coding - Medium and was authored by Clavin June


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