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Learn Go with tests

Or learn test-driven development with Go

Build Status Go Report Card

You can read this on Gitbook

Translations: 中文

Why

  • Explore the Go language by writing tests
  • Get a grounding with TDD. Go is a good language for learning TDD because it is a simple language to learn and testing is built-in
  • Be confident that you'll be able to start writing robust, well-tested systems in Go

Table of contents

If there's no link, it's not done yet! why not contribute?

Go fundamentals

  1. Install Go - Set up environment for productivity.
  2. Hello, world - Declaring variables, constants, if/else statements, switch, write your first go program and write your first test. Sub-test syntax and closures.
  3. Integers - Further Explore function declaration syntax and learn new ways to improve the documentation of your code.
  4. Iteration - Learn about for and benchmarking.
  5. Arrays and slices - Learn about arrays, slices, len, varargs, range and test coverage.
  6. Structs, methods & interfaces - Learn about struct, methods, interface and table driven tests.
  7. Pointers & errors - Learn about pointers and errors.
  8. Maps - Learn about storing values in the map data structure.
  9. Dependency Injection - Learn about dependency injection, how it relates to using interfaces and a primer on io.
  10. Mocking - Take some existing untested code and use DI with mocking to test it.
  11. Concurrency - Learn how to write concurrent code to make your software faster.
  12. Select - Learn how to synchronise asynchronous processes elegantly.
  13. Reflection (WIP) - Learn about reflection

Property-based tests (todo)

Build an application

Now that you have hopefully digested the Go Fundamentals section you have a solid grounding of a majority of Go's language features and how to do TDD.

This next section will involve building an application.

Each chapter will iterate on the previous one, expanding the application's functionality as our product owner dictates.

New concepts will be introduced to help facilitate writing great code but most of the new material will be learning what can be accomplished from Go's standard library.

By the end of this, you should have a strong grasp as to how to iteratively write an application in Go, backed by tests.

  • HTTP server - We will create an application which listens to HTTP requests and responds to them.
  • JSON, routing and embedding - We will make our endpoints return JSON and explore how to do routing.
  • IO and sorting - We will persist and read our data from disk and we'll cover sorting data.
  • Command line (TODO) - Working with flags and responding to user input on the command line

Contributing

  • This project is work in progress If you would like to contribute, please do get in touch.
  • Read contributing.md for guidelines
  • Any ideas? Create an issue

Background

I have some experience introducing Go to development teams and have tried different approaches as to how to grow a team from some people curious about Go into highly effective writers of Go systems.

What didn't work

Read the book

An approach we tried was to take the blue book and every week discuss the next chapter along with the exercises.

I love this book but it requires a high level of commitment. The book is very detailed in explaining concepts, which is obviously great but it means that the progress is slow and steady - this is not for everyone.

I found that whilst a small number of people would read chapter X and do the exercises, many people didn't.

Solve some problems

Katas are fun but they are usually limited in their scope for learning a language; you're unlikely to use goroutines to solve a kata.

Another problem is when you have varying levels of enthusiasm. Some people just learn way more of the language than others and when demonstrating what they have done end up confusing people with features the others are not familiar with.

This ends up making the learning feel quite unstructured and ad hoc.

What did work

By far the most effective way was by slowly introducing the fundamentals of the language by reading through go by example, exploring them with examples and discussing them as a group. This was a more interactive approach than "read chapter x for homework".

Over time the team gained a solid foundation of the grammar of the language so we could then start to build systems.

This to me seems analogous to practicing scales when trying to learn guitar.

It doesn't matter how artistic you think you are, you are unlikely to write good music without understanding the fundamentals and practicing the mechanics.

What works for me

When I learn a new programming language I usually start by messing around in a REPL but eventually, I need more structure.

What I like to do is explore concepts and then solidify the ideas with tests. Tests verify the code I write is correct and documents the feature I have learned.

Taking my experience of learning with a group and my own personal way I am going to try and create something that hopefully proves useful to other teams. Learning the fundamentals by writing small tests so that you can then take your existing software design skills and ship some great systems.

Who this is for

  • People who are interested in picking up Go
  • People who already know some Go, but want to explore testing more

What you'll need

  • A computer!
  • Installed Go
  • A text editor
  • Some experience with programming. Understanding of concepts like if, variables, functions etc.
  • Comfortable with using the terminal

Feedback

MIT license

Logo is by egonelbre What a star!

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