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Go CookBook

You're reading from   Go CookBook Top techniques and practical solutions for real-life Go programming problems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835464397
Length
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Burak Serdar Burak Serdar
Author Profile Icon Burak Serdar
Burak Serdar
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Project Organization 2. Chapter 2: Working with Strings FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Working with Date and Time 4. Chapter 4: Working with Arrays, Slices, and Maps 5. Chapter 5: Working with Types, Structs, and Interfaces 6. Chapter 6: Working with Generics 7. Chapter 7: Concurrency 8. Chapter 8: Errors and Panics 9. Chapter 9: The Context Package 10. Chapter 10: Working with Large Data 11. Chapter 11: Working with JSON 12. Chapter 12: Processes 13. Chapter 13: Network Programming 14. Chapter 14: Streaming Input/Output 15. Chapter 15: Databases 16. Chapter 16: Logging 17. Chapter 17: Testing, Benchmarking, and Profiling 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Timers

Use time.Timer to schedule some work to be done in the future. When the timer expires, you will receive a signal from a channel. You can use a timer to run a function later or to cancel a process that ran too long.

How to do it...

You can create a timer in one of two ways:

  • Use time.NewTimer or time.After. The timer will send a signal through a channel when it expires. Use a select statement, or read from the channel to receive the timer expiration signal.
  • Use time.AfterFunc to call a function when the timer expires.

How it works...

A time.Timer timer is created with time.Duration:

// Create a 10-second timer
timer := time.NewTimer(time.Second*10)

The timer contains a channel that will receive the current timestamp after 10 seconds pass. A timer is created with a channel capacity of 1, so the timer runtime will always be able to write to that channel and stop the timer. In other words, if you fail to read from a timer, it will not leak; it will...

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