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Getting Started with V Programming

You're reading from   Getting Started with V Programming An end-to-end guide to adopting the V language from basic variables and modules to advanced concurrency

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839213434
Length 408 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Navule Pavan Kumar Rao Navule Pavan Kumar Rao
Author Profile Icon Navule Pavan Kumar Rao
Navule Pavan Kumar Rao
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction to the V Programming Language
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to V Programming FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Installing V Programming 4. Section 2: Basics of V Programming
5. Chapter 3: Variables, Constants, and Code Comments 6. Chapter 4: Primitive Data Types 7. Chapter 5: Arrays and Maps 8. Chapter 6: Conditionals and Iterative Statements 9. Chapter 7: Functions 10. Chapter 8: Structs 11. Chapter 9: Modules 12. Section 3: Advanced Concepts in V Programming
13. Chapter 10: Concurrency 14. Chapter 11: Channels – An Advanced Concurrency Pattern 15. Chapter 12: Testing 16. Chapter 13: Introduction to JSON and ORM 17. Chapter 14: Building a Microservice 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

In this chapter, we learned how to implement a RESTful microservice from the ground up. First, we created a new project and organized the code files. Then, we understood how to set up a vweb web server with SQLite as a database.

Following this, we implemented a Note struct that acted as a mapping between the object and relational database world. In the latter parts of this chapter, we implemented RESTful endpoints that performed CRUD operations on a Notes table. Additionally, we managed to define and implement the behavior associated with endpoints such as status codes, JSON payloads, and the JSON response format, to mention a few.

By the end of this chapter, we understood how to run the microservice implemented using a vweb web server. Additionally, we learned how to use Postman, which is a free software client that allows you to interact with web-based APIs. Then, we performed CRUD operations on the microservice we implemented.

This marks the end of this chapter...

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