> assumes that I already know about variables, operators, functions, Boolean expressions, et al. Learning Go by Jon Bodner is a good choice. It seems to assume that Go is the reader's second (or tenth) language.
Coincidentally, I just finished the final chapter of this book. I wanted to learn the fundamentals after taking an (execrable) Coursera/IBM course on Python and data science. This book was perfect. I like this style of…
SEEKING WORK | Freelance technical writer and editor I specialize in documentation for developer audiences: - API docs - Programming tutorials - Implementation guides - Conceptual topics (Short overviews and deep dives)…
> assumes that I already know about variables, operators, functions, Boolean expressions, et al. Learning Go by Jon Bodner is a good choice. It seems to assume that Go is the reader's second (or tenth) language.
Coincidentally, I just finished the final chapter of this book. I wanted to learn the fundamentals after taking an (execrable) Coursera/IBM course on Python and data science. This book was perfect. I like this style of…
SEEKING WORK | Freelance technical writer and editor I specialize in documentation for developer audiences: - API docs - Programming tutorials - Implementation guides - Conceptual topics (Short overviews and deep dives)…