Comments (1)
I don't necessarily disagree... I think that I'm more in favour of defensive program, than it seems that the lanugage developers of Go intended. I prefer to avoid panics and nil
references.
the user might not instantly realize that imported library function works not as expected
Similar, the user might not realise a panic could happen and this ends up crashing a critical system at some point.
I think my opinion of this is that, the general advise is to avoid using panic
, other than in startup / setup. So, why wouldn't we want to avoid a potential panic
everywhere else in the code?
I hope you understand, I'm not trying to be stubborn
from clean-go-article.
Related Issues (19)
- Better way for "keeping track of whether your structs are fulfilling the interface contract" HOT 4
- nil receivers do not panic HOT 1
- Suggestion: Update repo description. HOT 3
- Minor typo: string "conversation" should be "conversion" HOT 3
- Add topics to make the repo easier to find HOT 1
- Several concerns about the document HOT 5
- re:reading clean-go-article HOT 4
- Inverted bool checks HOT 2
- Allocless way to check interface compatibility HOT 4
- Add module or package naming HOT 1
- "Returning Defined Errors" section outdated HOT 1
- translation HOT 9
- typo in lambda discussion HOT 1
- Translate into pt_br HOT 1
- Use path.Ext
- May I contribute edits to the README to clarify some of the writing? HOT 2
- GetItem* is not an idiomatic method name HOT 7
- Use `Option.Check()` for Options struct input
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from clean-go-article.