Go is a compiled, statically typed programming language that makes it easy to build simple, reliable, and efficient software. It’s a general purpose programming language with modern features, clean syntax and a robust well-documented common library, making it a good candidate to learn as your first programming language. While it borrows ideas from other languages such as Algol and C, it has a very different character. It’s sometimes described as a simple language.
Go is an open source project developed by a team at Google and many contributors from the open source community. Go’s first release was in 2009, and it’s distributed under a BSD-style license.
Here’s our recommended tutorials to learn Go. If you’re looking for free Go programming books, check here.
1. A Tour of Go by Google
The tour is divided into a list of modules. Throughout the tour you will find a series of slides and exercises for you to complete.
The tour is interactive. The example programs demonstrate different aspects of Go. The programs in the tour are meant to be starting points for your own experimentation.
2. Go by Example by Mark McGranaghan
Go by Example is a hands-on introduction to Go using annotated example programs.
3. Effective Go by Google
This document gives tips for writing clear, idiomatic Go code. It augments the language specification, the Tour of Go, and How to Write Go Code, all of which you should read first.
4. Gophercises by Jon Calhoun
Not a tutorial, but a course that’ll teach you a lot about Go.
5. Golang tutorial series by Naveen Ramanathan
This tutorial provides an introduction to Go and also discusses the advantages of choosing Go over other programming languages. We will also learn how to install Go in Mac OS, Windows and Linux.
6. Cloudhadoop by Kiranbabu
A series of useful tutorials.
7. An Introductory Golang Tutorial by Brendon Hogger
This tutorial build a service in small steps, making a mess along the way and then cleaning it up again. As we progress through our Go tutorial, we’ll encounter lots of cool Go language features.
8. Go go-to guide by Stefan Nilsson
A real gem. Besides step-by-step guides, there’s some very informative tutorials.
All tutorials in this series:
Free Programming Tutorials | |
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Python | General-purpose, structured, powerful language |
C++ | General-purpose, portable, free-form, multi-paradigm language |
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Assembly | As close to writing machine code without writing in pure hexadecimal |
Swift | Powerful and intuitive general-purpose programming language |
Groovy | Powerful, optionally typed and dynamic language |
Go | Compiled, statically typed programming language |
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Perl | High-level, general-purpose, interpreted, scripting, dynamic language |
R | De facto standard among statisticians and data analysts |
COBOL | Common Business-Oriented Language |
Scala | Modern, object-functional, multi-paradigm, Java-based language |
Fortran | The first high-level language, using the first compiler |
Scratch | Visual programming language designed for 8-16 year-old children |
Lua | Designed as an embeddable scripting language |
Logo | Dialect of Lisp that features interactivity, modularity, extensibility |
Rust | Ideal for systems, embedded, and other performance critical code |
Lisp | Unique features - excellent to study programming constructs |
Ada | ALGOL-like programming language, extended from Pascal and others |
Haskell | Standardized, general-purpose, polymorphically, statically typed language |
Scheme | General-purpose, functional, language descended from Lisp and Algol |
Prolog | General purpose, declarative, logic programming language |
Forth | Imperative stack-based programming language |
Clojure | Dialect of the Lisp programming language |
Julia | High-level, high-performance language for technical computing |
SQL | Access and manipulate data held in a relational database management system |
Erlang | General-purpose, concurrent, declarative, functional language |
VimL | Powerful scripting language of the Vim editor |
OCaml | General-purpose, powerful, high-level language |
Awk | Versatile language designed for pattern scanning and processing |
Racket | Platform for programming language design and implementation |
BASIC | Family of general-purpose, high-level programming languages |
CoffeeScript | A very succinct programming language that transcompiles into JavaScript |
LaTeX | Professional document preparation system and document markup language |
Elixir | Relatively new functional language that runs on the Erlang virtual machine |
Dart | Client-optimized programming language for fast apps |
ABAP | Advanced Business Application Programming |
F# | General purpose, strongly typed, multi-paradigm language. Part of ML |
Chapel | Parallel-programming language in development at Cray Inc. |
Dylan | Multi-paradigm language, supports functional & object-oriented programming |
D | General-purpose systems programming language with a C-like syntax |
Solidity | Object-oriented, high-level language for implementing smart contracts |
XML | Set of rules for defining semantic tags that describe the structure and meaning |
Vala | Object-oriented language with a self-hosting compiler that generates C code |
ECMAScript | Best known as the language embedded in web browsers |
Kotlin | Statically typed, general-purpose programming language with type inference |
TypeScript | Strict syntactical superset of JavaScript, adding optional static typing |
Markdown | Plain text formatting syntax designed to be easy-to-read and easy-to-write |
Pike | Interpreted, general-purpose, high-level, cross-platform, dynamic language |
HTML | HyperText Markup Language |
Factor | Dynamic stack-based language |
Objective-C | General purpose language which is a superset of C |
Standard ML | One of the two main dialects of the ML language |
Alice | Educational language with an integrated development environment |
Agda | Dependently typed functional language based on intuitionistic type theory |
Icon | High-level, general-purpose language |
PureScript | Small strongly, statically typed language with expressive types |
Tcl | Dynamic language based on concepts of Lisp, C, and Unix shells |
Eiffel | Object-oriented language |