I'm one of those individuals who just started reading the manual of golang from beginning to end
I'm a serious as your next heart attack. Please don't get one
So I want to pick up a golang again because I only sat and read the manual, just for fun, just like I did when I was sitting and reading the manual for the Yamaha RD400 two stroke, decades ago, one of the most powerful street legal engines that Yamaha made in the 2-stroke version.
One thing I can tell you about that bike
IMHO, the Yamaha RD400 two stroke, is one of the most beautiful bikes that Yamaha has ever created
The RD400 two-stroke by Yamaha is one of the most wonderful two-stroke engines the Yamaha has put on a frame made it street legal so we could ride it without being a racer.
The only caveat is that you had to ride it on a circuit anyway
The Yamaha RD400 could go 360 km/h easily, without even Breaking The 12000 RPM Barrier. The bike could do 16,000 RPM with the proper mechanical motifications made by many powerfull race Brands. Doe K&N and Kerker ring a bell?
It's with the same dedication that I read the manual of golang, from bottom to bottom, top to top, side to side and diagonal to diagonal.
Then my workstation died
Let's take 60 seconds of silence for the death of my workstation.
I didn't mourn its death, but I stopped playing with golang.
Now I'm back, playing again with golang!
No who says programming isn't Fun
#bash #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #golang #Linux #POSIX #FOSS #100daysofCode #640DaysOfCode #1024DaysOfCode #Alphabet #programming #MacOS
https://go.dev/