Roadmap to becoming a Go developer in 2019:
Below you can find a chart demonstrating the paths that you can take and the libraries that you would want to learn to become a Go developer. I made this chart as a tip for everyone who asks me, "What should I learn next as a Go developer?"
The purpose of this roadmap is to give you an idea about the landscape. The road map will guide you if you are confused about what to learn next, rather than encouraging you to pick what is hype and trendy. You should grow some understanding of why one tool would be better suited for some cases than the other and remember hype and trendy does not always mean best suited for the job.
If you like or are using this project to learn or start your solution, please give it a star. Thanks!
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Prerequisites
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General Development Skills
- Learn GIT, create a few repositories on GitHub, share your code with other people
- Know HTTP(S) protocol, request methods (GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE, OPTIONS)
- Don't be afraid of using Google, Power Searching with Google
- Read a few books about algorithms and data structures
- Learn about implementation of a basic Authentication
- Solid principles, architectural & design patterns, ecc
- Basics of software testing (unit, integration, e2e)
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CLI Tools
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Web Frameworks + Routers
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Databases
- Relational
- Cloud Databases
- Search Engines
- NoSQL
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ORMs
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Caching
- GCache
- Distributed Cache
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Logging
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Real-Time Communication
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API Clients
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Good to Know
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Testing
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Task Scheduling
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MicroServices
- Message-Broker
- Message-Bus
- Frameworks
- RPC
If you think the roadmap can be improved, please do open a PR with any updates and submit any issues. Also, I will continue to improve this, so you might want to star this repository to revisit.
Idea from : ASP.NET Core Developer Roadmap
The roadmap is built using Draw.io. Project file can be found at golang-developer-roadmap.xml
file. To modify it, open draw.io, click Open Existing Diagram and choose xml
file with project. It will open the roadmap for you. Update it, upload and update the images in readme and create a PR (export as png with 400% zoom and minify that with Compressor.io).
- Open a pull request with improvements
- Discuss ideas in issues
- Spread the word