Ultimate Go Programming LiveLessons [Updated]
ISBN: 0134757483 | .MP4, AVC, 5500 kbps, 1280x720 | English, AAC, 166 kbps, 2 Ch | 14 hrs 50 mins | 42.78 GB
Instructor: William Kennedy
ISBN: 0134757483 | .MP4, AVC, 5500 kbps, 1280x720 | English, AAC, 166 kbps, 2 Ch | 14 hrs 50 mins | 42.78 GB
Instructor: William Kennedy
Ultimate Go Programming LiveLessons provides an intensive, comprehensive, and idiomatic view of the Go programming language. This course focuses on both the specification and implementation of the language, including topics ranging from language syntax, design, and guidelines to concurrency, testing, and profiling. This class is perfect for anyone who wants a jump-start in learning Go or wants a more thorough understanding of the language and its internals.
In this video training, Bill Kennedy starts by providing a deep and intensive dive into Go’s language syntax, idioms, implementation, and specification. Then Bill guides you through the essential things you need to know about designing software in Go. With that strong foundation, Bill then teaches the language mechanics behind Go’s concurrency primitives and covers all the things you need to know to design concurrent software. Finally, Bill covers the tooling Go provides for testing, tracing, and profiling your programs.
Skill Level: Intermediate
What You Will Learn
Language mechanics and internals
Data structures and mechanical sympathy
Software design and best practices
Project structure and design
Concurrent software design
Testing and benchmarking
Tracing and profiling
Who Should Take This Course
Any intermediate-level developer who has some experience with other programming languages and wants to learn Go. This video is perfect for anyone who wants a jump-start in learning Go or wants a more thorough understanding of the language, its internals and how to design software.
Course Requirements
Studied CS in school or has a minimum of two years of experience programming full time professionally.
Familiar with structural and object-oriented programming styles.
Has worked with arrays, lists, queues and stacks.
Understands processes, threads and synchronization at a high level.
Operating Systems
Has worked with a command shell
Knows how to maneuver around the file system
Understands what environment variables are