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Go Programming - From Beginner to Professional

You're reading from   Go Programming - From Beginner to Professional Learn everything you need to build modern software using Go

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803243054
Length 680 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Samantha Coyle Samantha Coyle
Author Profile Icon Samantha Coyle
Samantha Coyle
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Toc

Table of Contents (30) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Scripts
2. Chapter 1: Variables and Operators FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Command and Control 4. Chapter 3: Core Types 5. Chapter 4: Complex Types 6. Part 2: Components
7. Chapter 5: Functions – Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle 8. Chapter 6: Don’t Panic! Handle Your Errors 9. Chapter 7: Interfaces 10. Chapter 8: Generic Algorithm Superpowers 11. Part 3: Modules
12. Chapter 9: Using Go Modules to Define a Project 13. Chapter 10: Packages Keep Projects Manageable 14. Chapter 11: Bug-Busting Debugging Skills 15. Chapter 12: About Time 16. Part 4: Applications
17. Chapter 13: Programming from the Command Line 18. Chapter 14: File and Systems 19. Chapter 15: SQL and Databases 20. Part 5: Building For The Web
21. Chapter 16: Web Servers 22. Chapter 17: Using the Go HTTP Client 23. Part 6: Professional
24. Chapter 18: Concurrent Work 25. Chapter 19: Testing 26. Chapter 20: Using Go Tools 27. Chapter 21: Go in the Cloud 28. Index 29. Other Books You May Enjoy

Simple routing

The server we built in the previous exercise doesn’t do much – it just responds with a message; we cannot ask anything else. Before we can make our server more dynamic, let’s imagine we want to create an online book and we want to be able to select a chapter just by changing the URL. At the moment, if we browse the following pages, we’ll always see the same message:

http://localhost:8080
http://localhost:8080/hello
http://localhost:8080/chapter1

Now, we want to associate different messages with these different paths on our server. We will do this by introducing some simple routing to our server.

A path is what you see after 8080 in the URL, where 8080 is the port number we chose to run the server on. This path can be one number, a word, a set of numbers, or character groups separated by a /. To do this, we will use another function of the net/http package:

HandleFunc(pattern string, handler func(ResponseWriter, *Request))

Here...

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