go podcast()

Dominic St-Pierre
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Nov 27, 2024 • 1h 6min

048: Lea Anthony on Wails

I'm receiving Lea, creator of the Wails project. Allowing Gophers to build desktop application using web tech for the frontend.Links:Wails.ioWant to support me with the show, talk about it and rate it where you're listening. Also you can purchase my courses at 50% off for listeners of the show: Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go.
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Nov 6, 2024 • 1h 9min

047: Fyne toolkit with Andy Williams

This week I talk with Andy Williams about the Fyne toolkit. It's impressive how much you can do with Fyne targeting mostly all platform where you'd want your application to run. In a world where web is getting a little bit out of hand, it's refreshing to see that desktop still have its place in the software world.Links:Fyne websiteJoin us on #gopodcast in the Gophers Slack. Any mention of this podcast would be extremely appreciated. To support the effort of running the pod you can purchase my courses at 50% off for listeners: Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go.
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Oct 29, 2024 • 1h 7min

046: Let's talk about Rust with John Arundel

Join John Arundel, a seasoned software developer and educator recognized for his expertise in Go and Rust, as he breaks down the nuances of learning Rust. He proposes that embracing Rust can enhance a Gopher's skills while discussing its unique memory management system and stricter data ownership. John contrasts Rust's error handling with Go's, highlighting how each language tackles concurrency challenges. Their conversation underscores the importance of continuous learning in programming for mental engagement and career growth.
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Oct 15, 2024 • 1h 9min

045: Gomponent with Markus Wustenberg

This week I'm joined by Markus Wustenberg, the author of Gomponent, a library that lets you write your HTML directly in Go using a component approach with type safety.Links:Gomponent main websiteMarkus's blogMarkus's Go courseThere's a channel in the Gophers slack community, join #gopodcast.If you'd want to support the show consider purchasing my Go courses, which are 50% off for listeners of this show. Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go.
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Sep 30, 2024 • 36min

Toying with static analysis of HTML templates

After last episode with Templ maintainers I was really pumped to try Templ and see if it would work for me. Without spoiling too much I believe it would have been easier to start from scratch with Templ vs. trying to migrate an existing project.This led me to try and see if I could add static analysis of my templates in my library tpl. I don't really have a PoC yet, but kind of getting close to it. If everything continue I should be able to capture errors in using of wrong field in template, like typos in field name that are caught at runtime at this moment.Links: https://github.com/dstpierre/tplAlso if you want to support this show, this is a 50% discount on my courses: Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go.
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Sep 10, 2024 • 1h 9min

Adrian Hesketh and Joe Davidson on Templ

In this episode Adrian Hesketh and Joe Davidson from Templ joins me and we talk about the what, why, and how of Templ. If you haven't checked it out, Templ helps creating strongly typed html template and use a component based approach to building web interface in Go.Links:Templ GitHub repoThe documentationGo ship itQuicktemplateAs always if you want to support the time I invest into this podcast the best way is by purchasing my courses which are at 50% off for listener of this pod: Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go.
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Jul 3, 2024 • 52min

042: Gate keeping and teaching of programming with Ramesh Sringeri

Ramesh joins me this week to talk about his experiences teaching programming in Girls who code club and gate keeping that can discourage some people from choosing computer science as their career path.Links:Confluence podcast with RameshScott Hanselman's blog Profanity doesn't workRamesh's blogHanselminutes podcastChangeLogI'd appreciate any mention you can share about the pod. If you'd like to support the effort, the best way if to purchase my courses, listeners of the show get 50% off Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go.
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Jun 25, 2024 • 1h 2min

041: Speaking at conferences with Matt Boyle

Getting out there, showing what you're currently doing / learning, starting a blog, creating content to help other software engineers, those are all good way to distinguish yourself. You might want to consider speaking at conferences as well. In this episode we're talking with Matt Boyle about the what, why, how of getting your first conference talk accepted.Links:@GopherCon on TwitterSessionizedMatt's blog post on what should you buildWriting a successful GopherCon proposalByteSizeGo Matt's courses and booksAs always I'd appreciate if you can talk about the pod, share a link, add a review. If you want to support the efforts the best way is to purchase my courses: Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go.
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Jun 18, 2024 • 1h

040: CLI in Go and other tech talks with Marian Montagnino

I'm joined by Marian Montagnino this week. We talk about CLI in Go, programming languages. Java and Elm mentioned, be warned .;) and other tech related stuff. Marian wrote a book on building CLI in Go and presented multiple talks at Go conferences.We had some connectivity glitches during our call making it challenging. You won't here the internet cuts as we did, but the lag is real, sorry about that.Links:Building Modern CLI Applications in GoMarian on TwitterAs always I'd highly appreciate any mention of the pod and if you want to support the show the best way is to grab my courses at 50% off for listeners of the show: Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go
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Jun 5, 2024 • 35min

039: Go is now more fun to build web apps

I started a monolith-style web application couple of weeks ago and force to admit that Go is more and more fun to use where I was considering more like Django or Rails before.For me there was still the templates aspect that needed to be fixed, and I wrote a library for that. The other major place where I was not enjoying myself was the database code, found it way to repetitive for application that had a lot of SQL tables.We're in a very good place at the moment and the benefits of having a compiled language to build heavy backend web application is great.Links:dstpierre/tpl - a simple library to help with templates structuring, parsing, and renderingsqlc - I finally surrender, and I like itAs always if you want to support the show you may purchase my courses Build SaaS apps in Go and Build a Google Analytics in Go.

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