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Go (programming language)

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Go
ParadigmMulti-paradigm: concurrent imperative, object-oriented[1][2]
Designed byRobert Griesemer
Rob Pike
Ken Thompson
DeveloperThe Go Authors[3]
First appearedNovember 10, 2009; 15 years ago (2009-11-10)
Stable release1.12.7[4] Edit this on Wikidata / 8 July 2019; 3 September 2019; 26 February 2020; 16 July 2020; 11 August 2020; 12 November 2020; 3 December 2020; 19 January 2021; 4 February 2021; 16 February 2021; 10 March 2021; 11 March 2021; 1 April 2021; 6 May 2021; 3 June 2021; 12 July 2021; 5 August 2021; 16 August 2021; 9 September 2021; 7 October 2021; 4 November 2021; 2 December 2021; 9 December 2021; 6 January 2022; 10 February 2022; 3 March 2022; 15 March 2022; 12 April 2022; 10 May 2022; 1 June 2022; 12 July 2022; 2 August 2022; 6 September 2022; 4 October 2022; 1 November 2022; 6 December 2022; 10 January 2023; 1 February 2023; 14 February 2023; 7 March 2023; 4 April 2023; 2 May 2023; 6 June 2023; 11 July 2023; 1 August 2023; 8 August 2023; 6 September 2023; 5 October 2023; 10 October 2023; 7 November 2023; 5 December 2023; 9 January 2024; 6 February 2024; 5 March 2024; 3 April 2024; Error: first parameter cannot be parsed as a date or time. (8 July 2019; 3 September 2019; 26 February 2020; 16 July 2020; 11 August 2020; 12 November 2020; 3 December 2020; 19 January 2021; 4 February 2021; 16 February 2021; 10 March 2021; 11 March 2021; 1 April 2021; 6 May 2021; 3 June 2021; 12 July 2021; 5 August 2021; 16 August 2021; 9 September 2021; 7 October 2021; 4 November 2021; 2 December 2021; 9 December 2021; 6 January 2022; 10 February 2022; 3 March 2022; 15 March 2022; 12 April 2022; 10 May 2022; 1 June 2022; 12 July 2022; 2 August 2022; 6 September 2022; 4 October 2022; 1 November 2022; 6 December 2022; 10 January 2023; 1 February 2023; 14 February 2023; 7 March 2023; 4 April 2023; 2 May 2023; 6 June 2023; 11 July 2023; 1 August 2023; 8 August 2023; 6 September 2023; 5 October 2023; 10 October 2023; 7 November 2023; 5 December 2023; 9 January 2024; 6 February 2024; 5 March 2024; 3 April 2024)
Typing disciplineInferred, static, strong, structural,[5][6] nominal
Implementation languageGo, Assembly language (gc); C++ (gofrontend)
OSmany
License3-clause BSD[3] + patent grant[7]
Filename extensions.go
Websitego.dev
Major implementations
gc, gofrontend
Influenced by
C, Oberon-2, Limbo, Active Oberon, communicating sequential processes, Pascal, Oberon, Smalltalk, Newsqueak, Modula-2, Alef, APL, BCPL, Modula, occam, Erlang,
Influenced
Odin, Crystal, Zig, V (Vlang)

Go, also known as Golang, is a statically-typed concurrent programming language made by an engineer team at Google.[8][9]

Here is a hello world program in Go.

package main
// Import fmt library through the standard library.
import "fmt"

// Define entry point.
func main() {
    // Write to output.
    fmt.println("Hello world!")
}

References

[change | change source]
  1. "Is Go an object-oriented language?". Retrieved April 13, 2019. Although Go has types and methods and allows an object-oriented style of programming, there is no type hierarchy.
  2. "Go: code that grows with grace". Retrieved June 24, 2018. Go is Object Oriented, but not in the usual way.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Text file LICENSE". The Go Programming Language. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
  4. "Release History - The Go Programming Language". Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  5. "Why doesn't Go have "implements" declarations?". golang.org. Retrieved October 1, 2015.
  6. Pike, Rob (December 22, 2014). "Rob Pike on Twitter". Retrieved March 13, 2016. Go has structural typing, not duck typing. Full interface satisfaction is checked and required.
  7. "Additional IP Rights Grant". The Go Programming Language. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
  8. "The Go Programming Language". golang.org. Retrieved 2021-04-13.
  9. "Golang: the simple programming language from Google". IONOS Digitalguide. Retrieved 2021-04-13.