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Hands-On GUI Application Development in Go

You're reading from   Hands-On GUI Application Development in Go Build responsive, cross-platform, graphical applications with the Go programming language

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789138412
Length 450 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Andrew Williams Andrew Williams
Author Profile Icon Andrew Williams
Andrew Williams
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Graphical User Interface Development FREE CHAPTER
2. The Benefits of Native Graphical Applications 3. Graphical User Interface Challenges 4. Go to the Rescue! 5. Section 2: Toolkits Using Existing Widgets
6. Walk - Building Graphical Windows Applications 7. andlabs UI - Cross-platform Native UIs 8. Go-GTK - Multiple Platforms with GTK 9. Go-Qt - Multiple Platforms with Qt 10. Section 3: Modern Graphical Toolkits
11. Shiny - Experimental Go GUI API 12. nk - Nuklear for Go 13. Fyne - Material Design-Based GUI 14. Section 4: Growing and Distributing Your Application
15. Navigation and Multiple Windows 16. Concurrency, Networking, and Cloud Services 17. Best Practices in Go GUI Development 18. Distributing Your Application 19. Installation Details 20. Cross Compiler Setup 21. Comparison of GUI Toolkits
22. Connecting GoMail to a Real Email Server 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

In this chapter, we looked at how the Go language is very well-suited to developing graphical applications. Its design for handling concurrency makes the types of multithreading needed by GUIs easy to manage. Channels, the main thread-communication feature, are a little hard to learn, but through some basic examples, we saw how common concurrency issues could easily be avoided. The write-once-compile-anywhere ethos of Go means that developers can easily compile the same code and deliver native apps across most common platforms from a single codebase using the provided tools. As a modern language, it's designed to operate in a connected world and its support for network communications and web services is excellent – we ran examples that illustrated how objects can be easily transformed to and from common web formats.

Having explored the many ways that Go...

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