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Mastering Go

You're reading from   Mastering Go Create Golang production applications using network libraries, concurrency, machine learning, and advanced data structures

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838559335
Length 798 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Mihalis Tsoukalos Mihalis Tsoukalos
Author Profile Icon Mihalis Tsoukalos
Mihalis Tsoukalos
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

1. Go and the Operating System 2. Understanding Go Internals FREE CHAPTER 3. Working with Basic Go Data Types 4. The Uses of Composite Types 5. How to Enhance Go Code with Data Structures 6. What You Might Not Know About Go Packages and Functions 7. Reflection and Interfaces for All Seasons 8. Telling a UNIX System What to Do 9. Concurrency in Go – Goroutines, Channels, and Pipelines 10. Concurrency in Go – Advanced Topics 11. Code Testing, Optimization, and Profiling 12. The Foundations of Network Programming in Go 13. Network Programming – Building Your Own Servers and Clients 14. Machine Learning in Go 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using standard output

Standard output is more or less equivalent to printing on the screen. However, using standard output might require the use of functions that do not belong to the fmt package, which is why it is presented in its own section.

The relevant technique will be illustrated in stdOUT.go and will be offered in three parts. The first part of the program is as follows:

package main 
 
import ( 
    "io" 
    "os" 
) 

So, stdOUT.go will use the io package instead of the fmt package. The os package is used for reading the command-line arguments of the program and for accessing os.Stdout.

The second portion of stdOUT.go contains the following Go code:

func main() { 
    myString := "" 
    arguments := os.Args 
    if len(arguments) == 1 { 
        myString = "Please give me one argument!" 
    } else { 
        myString = arguments[1] 
    } 

The myString variable holds the text that will be printed on the screen, which is either the first command-line argument of the program or, if the program was executed without any command-line arguments, a hardcoded text message.

The third part of the program is as follows:

    io.WriteString(os.Stdout, myString) 
    io.WriteString(os.Stdout, "\n") 
} 

In this case, the io.WriteString() function works in the same way as the fmt.Print() function; however, it takes only two parameters. The first parameter is the file you want to write to, which, in this case, is os.Stdout, and the second parameter is a string variable.

Strictly speaking, the type of the first parameter of the io.WriteString() function should be io.Writer, which requires a slice of bytes as the second parameter. However, in this case, a string variable does the job just fine. You will learn more about slices in Chapter 3, Working with Basic Go Data Types.

Executing stdOUT.go will produce the following output:

$ go run stdOUT.go
Please give me one argument!
$ go run stdOUT.go 123 12
123
  

The preceding output verifies that the io.WriteString() function sends the contents of its second parameter onto the screen when its first parameter is os.Stdout.

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