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The Go Workshop

You're reading from   The Go Workshop Learn to write clean, efficient code and build high-performance applications with Go

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838647940
Length 824 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (6):
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Sam Hennessy Sam Hennessy
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Sam Hennessy
Andrew Hayes Andrew Hayes
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Andrew Hayes
Gobin Sougrakpam Gobin Sougrakpam
Author Profile Icon Gobin Sougrakpam
Gobin Sougrakpam
Jeremy Leasor Jeremy Leasor
Author Profile Icon Jeremy Leasor
Jeremy Leasor
Delio D'Anna Delio D'Anna
Author Profile Icon Delio D'Anna
Delio D'Anna
Dániel Szabó Dániel Szabó
Author Profile Icon Dániel Szabó
Dániel Szabó
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Variables and Operators FREE CHAPTER 2. Logic and Loops 3. Core Types 4. Complex Types 5. Functions 6. Errors 7. Interfaces 8. Packages 9. Basic Debugging 10. About Time 11. Encoding and Decoding (JSON) 12. Files and Systems 13. SQL and Databases 14. Using the Go HTTP Client 15. HTTP Servers 16. Concurrent Work 17. Using Go Tools 18. Security 19. Special Features Appendix

HTTP Handler

In order to react to an HTTP request, we need to write something that, we usually say, handles the request; hence, we call this something a handler. In Go, we have several ways to do that, and one is to implement the handler interface of the http package. This interface has one method that is pretty self-explanatory, and this is as follows:

ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request)

So, whenever we need to create a handler for HTTP requests, we can create a struct including this method and we can use it to handle an HTTP request. For example:

type MyHandler struct {}
func(h MyHandler) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {}

This is a valid HTTP handler and you can use it this way:

http.ListenAndServe(":8080", MyHandler{})

Here, ListenAndServe() is a function that will use our handler to serve the requests; any struct implementing the handler interface will be fine. However, we need to let our server do something.

As you...

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