|
You are here |
hermanschaaf.com | ||
| | | | |
machiel.me
|
|
| | | | | Freelance developer from Amsterdam, passionate about Go | |
| | | | |
mfbmina.dev
|
|
| | | | | One of my favorite features in Go is the possibility of writing benchmark tests. At Go 1.24, this feature has a new look, making it easier to use. To demonstrate these changes, let's suppose a function that calculates the factorial recursively and one that calculates it through loops. func FatorialRecursive(n int) int { if n == 0 { return 1 } return n * FatorialRecursive(n-1) } func FatorialLoop(n int) int { aux := 1 for i := 1; i <= n; i++ { aux *= i } return aux } Previously, to write a benchmark, it was necessary to write down the whole execution loop of the test. When done, we need to run the command $ go test -bench . | |
| | | | |
fernandocorreia.dev
|
|
| | | | | This is part 13 of my journey learning Golang. Strings in Go Strings represent a sequence of bytes. More specifically, a read-only slice of uint8 integers. ... | |
| | | | |
golangbot.com
|
|
| | | A tutorial about WebAssembly and how to cross compile and run Go programs in the browser using WebAssembly. | ||