Auto-tag any posts inside May 2024 as WeblogPoMo2024. Add Day 3 post.
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Lewis Dale 2024-05-01 07:29:02 +01:00
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{
"tags": ["WeblogPoMo2024"]
}

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title: "Learning Go: Day One"
date: 2024-05-01T08:00:00.0Z
tags:
- tech
- learning
- go
- WeblogPoMo2024
excerpt: "I've wanted to try learning Go for a while now, but have never got round to it. So I'm going to (attempt) to learn a little bit about it each day, and blog about it, with a view to building something with it by the end of the month."
---

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title: "Learning Go: Day Two"
date: 2024-05-02T08:00:00.0Z
tags:
- tech
- learning
- go
- WeblogPoMo2024
excerpt: "In part two, I take a look at how to organise code into packages"
---

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---
title: "Learning Go: Day Three"
date: 2024-05-03T08:00:00.0Z
tags:
- learning
- go
excerpt: "For my third day of learning Go, I'm going to take a look at some control structures"
---
Over the last two days I've learned how to [setup and create a Go project](/post/learning-go-day-1/), and then [how to organise code into packages](/post/learning-go-day-2). I realise I've skipped a crucial step there, though, which is learning how to deal with control structures.
By control structures, I'm referring to things like `for-` loops, `if` statements, etc. You know, the things that make the software do things beyond just multiplying 2 by 5.
## For-loops
The old trusty workhorse of any programming language. These seem pretty straightforward in Go, similar to most other languages:
```go
// maths.go
// Calculate val to the n'th power
func Pow(val, n int) int {
for i:= 1; i < n; i++ {
val *= val
}
return val
}
// main.go
func main() {
four_squared := maths.Pow(4, 2)
fmt.Printf("4^2 = %d\n", four_squared)
}
```
Cool, this worked. I have successfully reinvented a small wheel[^1].
## Do-While
The _other_ trusty workhorse! Most languages have some form of this construct that says something like:
```
while statement is true:
do something
```
But not Go, apparently! Or at least, not explicitly. In for-loops, the first and last arguments - defining a variable and performing an operation on it - are totally optional, so a while loop is just a for-loop[^2]:
```go
// maths.go
func Mod(a, b int) int {
remainder := a
for remainder >= b {
remainder -= b
}
return remainder
}
```
## If-else-then
The third trusty workhorseman of the Gopocalypse[^3]. Basic if-statements are pretty straightforward:
```go
// maths.go
func Divide(a, b int) int {
if a == 0 {
return 0
}
if b == 0 {
return 0
}
return a / b
}
```
Which could be cleaned up to use else-if:
```go
// maths.go
func Divide(a, b int) int {
if a == 0 {
return 0
} else if b == 0 {
return 0
}
}
```
You can also add variable declarations to if-statements, which are then only accessible inside the blocks:
```go
// maths.go
func Min(a, b int) int {
if v := a - b; v > 0 {
return b
} else {
return a
}
}
```
Okay, so that's covered most of the control structures off the top of my head. On my to-do list for the next couple of days are: working with arrays, and testing.
[^1]: This particular wheel is a lot slower than the original wheel, but hey, I'm learning
[^2]: Yes, yes, I know that's actually the case in many languages and `while` is just syntactic sugar
[^3]: I'm sorry.