This was probably the best video on go lang unit testing I've seen so far. I come from python unit testing with mock, and was able to understand everything. Good job!
Hey Daniel, thanks for the comment! To be honest, I haven't noticed any significant speed boosts. I will investigate on that 🧐 . Thanks for pointing it out!!!
I'd love a video for testify! seriously, nobody does any videos about unit testing. Its the same with nodejs, no one does anything with TSOA for nodejs unit testing.
Hey, thanks for the comment. Feedback like this is much appreciated! You are not the first who liked to have a video about testify. So I will make sure to create one. But it takes up more time and planning and structuring it. Be patient. But there will be a video on that!
Hey Jeff, thanks for the comment! I am glad that I could be of help. mocking is a great topic and I could actually talk about it for hours :D If more people want to see it, I will most certainly create a video about it.
I am getting the error "package command-line-arguments is not a main package" when using a package that has the same name as the filename (calculator in this case). How are you able to have a package calculator running in the code? Please guide.
Hey. Thanks for the comment. tl;dr: these three languages are more than enough. Personally, I think that it is not about the amount of languages you know, but rather the concepts of programming. If you fully understand C++, Java or Python, learning another language is pretty simple. But I would not learn more languages, just for the sake of learning them. If you need to switch languages, because you want to switch your focus of work, that is ok. For instance, if you want to learn data science and you do not know Python. Then learn Python. But I would not learn Python simply to put it onto my résumé. So it depends on what you want to accomplish with learning another language. Is there any special need why you want to learn one more?
Hey Rasika. Thanks for asking. professionally: Java, Kotlin, JS, Angular (+Typescript) and finally golang YAY side projects: I started with python and switched to golang about 3 years ago. I use VueJS for my frontends.