I’m about to start learning Go now. I tried it a few times before but I never got that ah-ha moment. I wanted to build a visual tool in the devops space, and go is prevalent so I need to learn it sooner or later.
But with your explanation, I see similarities to OCaml (which I love), where most of the work is modeling the domain by composing types.
I’m about to start learning Go now. I tried it a few times before but I never got that ah-ha moment. I wanted to build a visual tool in the devops space, and go is prevalent so I need to learn it sooner or later.
But with your explanation, I see similarities to OCaml (which I love), where most of the work is modeling the domain by composing types.