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.Go Programming Blueprints

You're reading from   .Go Programming Blueprints Build real-world, production-ready solutions in Go using cutting-edge technology and techniques

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786468949
Length 394 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Mat Ryer Mat Ryer
Author Profile Icon Mat Ryer
Mat Ryer
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chat Application with Web Sockets 2. Adding User Accounts FREE CHAPTER 3. Three Ways to Implement Profile Pictures 4. Command-Line Tools to Find Domain Names 5. Building Distributed Systems and Working with Flexible Data 6. Exposing Data and Functionality through a RESTful Data Web Service API 7. Random Recommendations Web Service 8. Filesystem Backup 9. Building a Q&A Application for Google App Engine 10. Micro-services in Go with the Go kit Framework 11. Deploying Go Applications Using Docker Appendix. Good Practices for a Stable Go Environment

Votes


Now that we have modeled questions and answers in our application, it's time to think about how voting might work.

Let's design it a little:

  • Users vote answers up and down based on their opinion of them

  • Answers are ordered by their score so the best ones appear first

  • Each person is allowed one vote per answer

  • If a user votes again, they should replace their previous vote

We will make use of a few things we have learned so far in this chapter; transactions will help us ensure the correct score is calculated for answers, and we'll use predictable keys again to ensure that each person gets only one vote per answer.

We will first build a structure to represent each vote and use field tags to be a little more specific about how we want the data store to index our data.

Indexing

Reads from Google Cloud Datastore are extremely fast due to the extensive use of indexes. By default, every field in our structure is indexed. Queries that attempt to filter on fields that aren't indexed will fail (the method...

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