A collection of random Go packages.
The iter
package builds on the standard iter
package.
It re-exports Seq
and Seq2
for convenience and adds Seq3
.
It adds sequence creation functions such as Empty
, Singleton
, and Values
.
var seq Seq[int] = iter.Empty[int]()
var seq Seq[int] = iter.Singleton(69)
var seq Seq[int] = iter.Values(69, 420)
It also adds various sequence operations such as Map
, Fold
, and Filter
.
var seq Seq[int] = iter.Values(69, 420)
// [70, 421]
mapped := iter.Map(seq, func(i int) int {
return i + 1
})
// 489
sum := iter.Fold(seq, func(acc, i int) {
return acc + i
}, 0)
// [69]
filtered := iter.Filter(seq, func(i int) bool {
return i != 420
})
Primarily re-exports functions and types for convenience.
Due to Go not currently supporting generic type aliases, these functions adapt the standard iter
seq to this module's iter
package.
func Test(seq iter.Seq2[string, int]) {
var m map[string]int = maps.Collect(seq)
}
The maps
package also adds AppendSeq
for appending a map
to a Seq2
.
seq := maps.All(map[string]string{"foo": "bar"})
// {"foo": "bar", "bin": "baz"}
seq = maps.AppendSeq(seq, map[string]string{"bin": "baz"})
The result
pakcage adds the Result
type representing either success or error.
It also adds various result operations such as Map
and Bind
.
func main() {
var r Result[int] = func() (int, error) {
return 420, nil
}
r = result.Map(r, func(x int) int {
return x+1
})
}
The slices
package re-exports functions and types from the standard slices
package for convenience.
Due to Go not currently supporting generic type aliases, these functions adapt the standard slices
seq to this module's slices
package.
The rx
package attempts to implement the observable and signal patterns for reactive programming in go.
Both observable
and signal
should be considered a 🚧 work in progress 🚧, but the observable
package is generally usable.
var obs rx.Observable[int] = subject.New[int]()
sub := obs.Subscribe(observer.Lift(func(i int) {
fmt.Println(i)
}))
defer sub()
obs.OnNext(69)
obs.OnComplete()
I stand on the shoulders of giants. A lot of this is inspired by the works of others, be sure to check out these repos as well. (They're much smarter than me)