"Find All References" does not find code in other packages outside
GOPATHin vscode
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-go/issues/2236
https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode-go/issues/1602
https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode-go/issues/1473
the root cause is that guru did not support that.
as
I agree with that. It is an odd choice, as I've never seen any other
library use a reference date like that - there may be many but in 20 years,
I've not seen one.
I think your argument about Parse is valid, but in most cases, you'll be
passing in a variable for the date you are parsing and the
Hi,
I am newbie to golang programming and planning to use xslt. Please let me
know the best XSLT API for golang.
Thanks
Praveen
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I'm new to go, been working with go for about ten weeks. So far, I've
worked on a couple of blockchain related projects (decred), and made some
PRs. But I still feel like I need more to be well grounded in golang. So
does anyone have any golang real world project ideas? I cannot seem to come
Look at the Cadence Workflow. It is a very powerful orchestration solution
including periodic jobs. And it has Go SDK: https://cadenceworkflow.io/
On Friday, August 9, 2019 at 5:39:44 AM UTC-7, Thiru k wrote:
>
> Hi,
> We have used goLang for developing the web based application using micro
>
Hello gophers,
We have just released Go version 1.12.9, a minor point release.
This release includes fixes to the linker, and the os and math/big packages.
View the release notes for more information:
https://golang.org/doc/devel/release.html#go1.12.minor
You can download binary and source
I put together a blog post on reproducing flaky Go tests:
https://www.influxdata.com/blog/reproducing-a-flaky-test-in-go/
This was the result of what I've learned spending many, many hours hunting
down many unreliable tests.
I hope these tips can help you out next time you have a test that
Please see upthread - gob does that for you.
On Thu, Aug 15, 2019 at 5:59 PM Robert Engels wrote:
> I think you will need to encode a struct that contains the type name and
> the struct. Then you decode using reflection.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: 'Axel Wagner' via golang-nuts
>
Have you seen: https://github.com/sonatype-nexus-community/nancy
"A tool to check for vulnerabilities in your Golang dependencies, powered
by Sonatype OSS Index"
On Wednesday, August 14, 2019 at 1:02:03 AM UTC-4, Eric Johnson wrote:
>
> And then, it also occurs to me that perhaps I can answer
On Wed, 14 Aug 2019 19:12:40 -0700 (PDT)
sp55aa@gmail.com wrote:
> What is the reason behind time.Parse using a reference time?
The rationale is that every position of the reference time can be
treated as an enum (of int) stating the exact meaning of the field:
01/02 03:04:05PM '06 -0700
1 2
Hm, I looked a bit at the code. ISTM that if you implement
BinaryMarshaler/Unmarshaler (or GobEncoder/Decoder), the values are sent as
a []byte, not an interface, so the concrete type information is lost. You
can kind of circumvent this, by instead passing the values as interface{}:
On Thu, Aug 15, 2019 at 11:14 AM Jochen Voss wrote:
> You are right. But the type is somehow represented by some index or so,
> instead of the name? Since the type needs to be registered using
> gob.Register() beforehand, this seems not totally impossible to me.
>
`Register` only gets the
Hi Axel,
On Thursday, 15 August 2019 09:13:17 UTC+1, Axel Wagner wrote:
>
> I haven't really used gob much, so unfortunately I can't *really* help
> you. But one thing to note is that you can dump the content of the buffer
> and see that it doesn't actually contain the name of the type you are
I haven't really used gob much, so unfortunately I can't *really* help you.
But one thing to note is that you can dump the content of the buffer and
see that it doesn't actually contain the name of the type you are encoding:
https://play.golang.org/p/R8HB6RP8kS0
I agree that from the
Dear Marcin,
My aim is to unmarshal into an interface variable, without having to know
in advance which concrete type I'm receiving (the actual interface has
several possible implementations, and gob data comes in over a network
connection). So, while your code avoids the panic, it does not
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