For those fluent in Go first, this is good as a quick Go to Python reference too. Though good as an initial quickstart, this invites programming in Go using a Python-style and vice versa. Glad that there’s at least a section on goroutines and chan.
That's an artifact of it being statically typed. The data type to unmarshal into / marshal from needs to be defined somewhere. The extra stuff apart from error handling isn't required if you use a more generic type like `map[string]interface{}`.
Perhaps worth pointing out, pedantically, that really only the final two lines are the JSON handling — the first three lines here are reading/handling the input stream (HTTP).
No garbage collected language will ever have RAII, the features conflict. Go does not have RAII, but tries to fix it with "defer" [1].
As for why not, you'd have to ask the Go team. But my guess would be that as a general rule, Go does not have language feature X. It's a very, very basic language deliberately lacking pretty much every modern language feature you can think of. The pro/con is that programming in Go is very delibarete. Go programs will only ever do what you explicitly make them do, to an almost ridiculous extent. If a Go program knows how to sort a list of customers, it takes 20 lines of code to make it aware of how to sort any other record type. Especially operations minded people this is a big plus.
7 comments
[ 6.1 ms ] story [ 48.8 ms ] thread// example for unmarshalling an http request to JSON
contents, err := ioutil.Readall(req.Body)
if err != nil { return err }
req.Body.Close()
user := new(User)
if err := json.Unmarshal(contents, user); err != nil { return nil }
// do whatever you want with 'user'
Does Go have something analogous to Rust's `try!` or `?` operator, which would turn it into (pseudocode):
Or: If not, why not?(I don't know Go)
As for why not, you'd have to ask the Go team. But my guess would be that as a general rule, Go does not have language feature X. It's a very, very basic language deliberately lacking pretty much every modern language feature you can think of. The pro/con is that programming in Go is very delibarete. Go programs will only ever do what you explicitly make them do, to an almost ridiculous extent. If a Go program knows how to sort a list of customers, it takes 20 lines of code to make it aware of how to sort any other record type. Especially operations minded people this is a big plus.
[1] https://blog.golang.org/defer-panic-and-recover