Maybe learn to take screenshots first? :P
I honestly don’t get why people like Go. Structural typing makes it so difficult to find classes that interpret an interface. Every dumb go project has to be opened in an IDE or something with a language server to find implementors of an interface. Also, forcing every capitalised object in a module or struct to be exported is just… wat? Returning a tuple of
whatever, err
also feels wrong. It’s like they couldn’t decide between throwing exceptions or an enum and went with something in between.I get that the inbuilt concurrency features are nice, but the rest of the language and stdlib feel very lackluster. At least that’s my impression after ~2 weeks of it. My retreat to Rust was rather quick.
The stdlib I actually find quite complete. Especially for http projects. You really don’t need third party libs for that for example.
The errors were super strange to me at the start, but I’ve come to really like it over exceptions. It is similar to old error codes, but I feel that this makes one always have to be mindful of error handling and the non happy path (thinking of large Python projects where no one cares about exceptions).
A lot of people tend to compare Go and Rust, but I feel that the languages are just too different. Rust is good for a variety of things which don’t overlap with the things Go is good for.
It is similar to old error codes, but I feel that this makes one always have to be mindful of error handling and the non happy path
Technically you need a separate linter (
errcheck
) to ensure you don’t just ignore errors. This is…not great. (That should have been a compiler error.)Yes, true. Having it built in in the compilation would be nice. Or at least having errcheck as a tool which already comes packed with Go.
Go has changed over time to include more things like this. Maybe one day this will be addressed.
Yeah, I was particularly glad to see the change in loop variable semantics become a stable part of the language. That was a terrible footgun.
There are other things I dislike about Go, but I do think it’s improving while maintaining its better qualities, which is no small feat.
I’m in a similar position. I tried Go too, but its not a fun language to work with for me. But I get what they are aiming for, a very simplistic language without too many features or structures, inspired by C itself. In fact one of the Go language developers is Ken Thompson, who developed C language itself too.
And you know what, that’s fine. Not every language has to offer everything. There are huge portion of people who like this approach. You can easily begin programming in Go, after a few hours or days of learning. There is really not much from language perspective to learn. I don’t have to like it, but others do, and that’s fine.
If anything, I would look at Zig instead Go. Zig is also not very complicated. Its even closer to C and can run C code directly. Its kinda the child of C and Rust.
Yeah, the Go creators seem to generally mean “resembles C” when they use words like “simple”, which could explain stuff like going “why do you need generics when you can just cast?” for, what, ten years?
I remember trying some Plan9 stuff and bouncing off it, including acme. I guess it’s the kind of thing that makes sense to Pike but not to me. Not sure what gophers in general think of it (but wikipedia lists at least Russ Cox as a user).
And the Garbage Collector in Go is also a thing that helps ton for most normal work. To be honest, I wish sometimes Rust had an optional GC mode (I know this would be against the principles of the language… don’t take this wish too seriously). I see it like C with a GC+Concurrency. And one should not forget, because the language is dead simple, the compiler compiles extremely fast; even suitable as an interpreter language basically (purely judging by speed metrics).
But after being exposed to Rust, I do not have fun with Go because it misses some really cool or basic functionality; like proper error handling. Ultimately these are different approaches and that’s good. In example functional programming works a bit differently and we are not saying they should give up on this approach, because you like C so much.
To be honest, I wish sometimes Rust had an optional GC mode (I know this would be against the principles of the language… don’t take this wish too seriously).
If you just need the occasional cop-out, you can wrap a value in an
Rc
or anArc
. They do reference-counting, which is almost like garbage collection (reference counting can’t resolve cycles between references).Yeah, Rust is ultimately a different project than Go, and I suspect much of the success of Go is down to stuff like good tooling, default GC, native static binaries, generally easy concurrency, rather than stuff like having as bare-bones a language as otherwise possible. I’d suspect having a focus on fast compilation also helps draw in people from interpreted languages.
It’s easy to write a Kubernetes microservice that performs adequately with Go, and that’s all a lot of people & teams need.
Are you trying to use the Lord’s JS to read files from your PC?
read svg file with path given in config
Know Jack shit about go and since all you need to do is read a file and put it in I thought I’d let ai handle it
İt took me far too long and I was just done with it by then and the ai for some reason is acting fucking playful it’s even mocking me I can’t handle it
My comment was supposed to be a bit of a joke…
Generally speaking, you cannot read a file from disk using JS in the browser because the sandbox doesn’t allow the code access to your disk. If you googled something like “read a file JS” it probably made an assumption that you’re using Server side like nodejs or deno. The only exception for in-browser that I know of is to upload files using an input tag.
that looks like a go template, so i’d wager it’s something server-side
Maybe, I’ve never used go templates before.