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Go Programming - From Beginner to Professional - Second Edition

You're reading from  Go Programming - From Beginner to Professional - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803243054
Pages 680 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Samantha Coyle Samantha Coyle
Profile icon Samantha Coyle
Toc

Table of Contents (30) Chapters close

Preface 1. Part 1: Scripts
2. Chapter 1: Variables and Operators 3. Chapter 2: Command and Control 4. Chapter 3: Core Types 5. Chapter 4: Complex Types 6. Part 2: Components
7. Chapter 5: Functions – Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle 8. Chapter 6: Don’t Panic! Handle Your Errors 9. Chapter 7: Interfaces 10. Chapter 8: Generic Algorithm Superpowers 11. Part 3: Modules
12. Chapter 9: Using Go Modules to Define a Project 13. Chapter 10: Packages Keep Projects Manageable 14. Chapter 11: Bug-Busting Debugging Skills 15. Chapter 12: About Time 16. Part 4: Applications
17. Chapter 13: Programming from the Command Line 18. Chapter 14: File and Systems 19. Chapter 15: SQL and Databases 20. Part 5: Building For The Web
21. Chapter 16: Web Servers 22. Chapter 17: Using the Go HTTP Client 23. Part 6: Professional
24. Chapter 18: Concurrent Work 25. Chapter 19: Testing 26. Chapter 20: Using Go Tools 27. Chapter 21: Go in the Cloud 28. Index 29. Other Books You May Enjoy

Adding users with GORM

So far, we’ve interacted with the database by writing some SQL queries directly. What we’ve done is create and run Go code, which was used to then run SQL code. This is perfectly fine, but there is also a way to run just Go code to interact with a SQL database. On top of this, the data that we are storing in the database will then be unwrapped into Go variables, and the content of a row might define the values of an instance of a Go struct. What we can do to improve and simplify the whole process is abstract the database even more and use an object-relational mapper (ORM). This is a library that matches the tables and their relations as Go structs so that you can insert and retrieve data the same way you would instantiate and delete any instance of a Go struct. An ORM is not generally part of a language, and Go does not provide one by itself. There is, however, a set of third-party libraries, one of which is the de facto ORM for Go, and this is...

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