• @icb4dc0de
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    47 months ago

    There’s also an experiment from the core dev team now: https://go.dev/blog/gonew that comes with 2 very basic templates that might be worth a look

  • @[email protected]
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    17 months ago

    Yeah, there is no standard.

    I don’t like this repo and I’ve been recommending people avoid it for years.

    If you need examples, checkout the golang source code or kubernetes repo.

    • @lysdexicOP
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      17 months ago

      Yeah, there is no standard.

      If you read the README.md file, you’ll stumble onto the next paragraph right at its start.

      This is a basic layout for Go application projects. It’s not an official standard defined by the core Go dev team; however, it is a set of common historical and emerging project layout patterns in the Go ecosystem. (…)

      I don’t like this repo and I’ve been recommending people avoid it for years.

      Unless you have a better reference that you can provide in place of this one, I don’t think you’re doing anyone any good. People use these documents for guidance, and no guidance at all is clearly not a better alternative to a concrete example whose worst traits is not fitting someone’s vague, subjective opinion.

      • @[email protected]
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        07 months ago

        If you read the README.md file, you’ll stumble onto the next paragraph right at its start.

        No need to read anything pass the project title, it says “golang-standards”. If it not standards, maybe change the project title ?

        Unless you have a better reference that you can provide in place of this one, I don’t think you’re doing anyone any good.

        I gave two examples in my initial comment. I can provide more, if you want.

    • 佐藤カズマ
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      17 months ago

      Pretty much. Once you get into the suck, you very quickly learn there isn’t a standard beyond that which the project/org dictates.