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Beschreibung
Part I: First look at Go.- Chapter 1: A Brief Look at Go vs. Java.- Chapter 2: What Java has that Go does not.- Chapter 3: A Deeper Comparison of Go and Java.- Part II: The Go Language.- Chapter 4: Key Go Aspects.- Chapter 5: Go Basic Features.- Chapter 6: Go Types.- Chapter 7: Errors and Panics.- Chapter 8: Go Statements.- Chapter 9: Applications for interfaces.- Chapter 10: Go Unit Tests and Benchmarks.- Chapter 11: Go Generic Types, Functions and Sample Programs.- Part III: Go Library Survey.- Chapter 12: Key Packages Comparison.- Chapter 13: Key Method/Function Comparison.- Chapter 14: Go Package Survey.- Chapter 15: SQL Database Access.- Chapter 16: Client and Server Support.- Chapter 17: Go Runtime.- Appendix A. Installing Go.- Appendix B: Some Go FAQs.- Appendix C: Go Gotchas to look out for.- Appendix D: Mark-Sweep Pseudo-code.- Appendix E: ASCII vs. UTF-8..- Appendix F: Go Playground Examples.- G. Java Example Source.
Part I: First look at Go.- Chapter 1: A Brief Look at Go vs. Java.- Chapter 2: What Java has that Go does not.- Chapter 3: A Deeper Comparison of Go and Java.- Part II: The Go Language.- Chapter 4: Key Go Aspects.- Chapter 5: Go Basic Features.- Chapter 6: Go Types.- Chapter 7: Errors and Panics.- Chapter 8: Go Statements.- Chapter 9: Applications for interfaces.- Chapter 10: Go Unit Tests and Benchmarks.- Chapter 11: Go Generic Types, Functions and Sample Programs.- Part III: Go Library Survey.- Chapter 12: Key Packages Comparison.- Chapter 13: Key Method/Function Comparison.- Chapter 14: Go Package Survey.- Chapter 15: SQL Database Access.- Chapter 16: Client and Server Support.- Chapter 17: Go Runtime.- Appendix A. Installing Go.- Appendix B: Some Go FAQs.- Appendix C: Go Gotchas to look out for.- Appendix D: Mark-Sweep Pseudo-code.- Appendix E: ASCII vs. UTF-8..- Appendix F: Go Playground Examples.- G. Java Example Source.
Über den Autor
Barry A. Feigenbaum, Ph.D., now retired, has decades of professional software engineering experience. During his career, he has worked for major industry-leading companies, such as IBM and Amazon, and most recently at Dell where he was a Senior Principal Software Engineer. He has worked on mainframe and midrange servers and many applications for personal computers. He has developed software products, such as assemblers and word processors for multiple hardware architectures, in many key industry languages such as various assemblers, FORTRAN, PL/I, C/C++/C#, Python, JavaScript, Java, and most recently Go. He has extensive experience in the full software development life cycle. Most recently, he was a lead on teams developing mission-critical microservices, most often written in Go and C++, that operate in large, clustered environments, often managed by Kubernetes.

He led the early development of the LAN support inside Microsoft Windows (he defined the SMB protocol that is the basis for both the CIFS (Windows) and the SAMBA (Unix and Linux) technologies). He has served as a software tester, developer, and designer as well as a development team lead, architect, and manager on multiple occasions. He was a key contributor as a developer, architect, and manager to several releases of PC-DOS (also MS-DOS) and OS/2. In these roles, he worked extensively with Microsoft on joint requirements, design, and implementation.

Dr. Feigenbaum has a Ph.D. in Computer Engineering with a concentration in object-oriented (OO) software design and a masters and bachelor degree in Electrical Engineering. He has published multiple articles in technical magazines and juried journals. He has coauthored several books on IBM PC-DOS. He has spoken at numerous technical conferences, such as JavaOne. He has served on industry standard bodies. He has taught multiple college-level courses on data structures, software engineering, and distributed software as an adjunct professor at several universities. He has over 20 issued US patents.

He is widowed, has one son, and lives in Austin, TX.
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Part I: First look at Go.- Chapter 1: A Brief Look at Go vs. Java.- Chapter 2: What Java has that Go does not.- Chapter 3: A Deeper Comparison of Go and Java.- Part II: The Go Language.- Chapter 4: Key Go Aspects.- Chapter 5: Go Basic Features.- Chapter 6: Go Types.- Chapter 7: Errors and Panics.- Chapter 8: Go Statements.- Chapter 9: Applications for interfaces.- Chapter 10: Go Unit Tests and Benchmarks.- Chapter 11: Go Generic Types, Functions and Sample Programs.- Part III: Go Library Survey.- Chapter 12: Key Packages Comparison.- Chapter 13: Key Method/Function Comparison.- Chapter 14: Go Package Survey.- Chapter 15: SQL Database Access.- Chapter 16: Client and Server Support.- Chapter 17: Go Runtime.- Appendix A. Installing Go.- Appendix B: Some Go FAQs.- Appendix C: Go Gotchas to look out for.- Appendix D: Mark-Sweep Pseudo-code.- Appendix E: ASCII vs. UTF-8..- Appendix F: Go Playground Examples.- G. Java Example Source.

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2026
Fachbereich: Programmiersprachen
Genre: Importe, Informatik
Rubrik: Naturwissenschaften & Technik
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: xxxvii
611 S.
54 s/w Illustr.
611 p. 54 illus.
ISBN-13: 9798868819063
Sprache: Englisch
Herstellernummer: 979-8-8688-1906-3
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Feigenbaum, Barry A.
Auflage: Second Edition
Hersteller: Apress
Apress L.P.
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: APress in Springer Science + Business Media, Heidelberger Platz 3, D-14197 Berlin, juergen.hartmann@springer.com
Maße: 254 x 178 x 35 mm
Von/Mit: Barry A. Feigenbaum
Erscheinungsdatum: 03.01.2026
Gewicht: 1,206 kg
Artikel-ID: 134426325