What I learned from contributing to Rust's linter February 26, 2023Write down what you're working on January 10, 2023XCheck at Meta: Why it exists and how it works October 16, 2022Please stop citing TIOBE July 28, 2022Lessons From A Tech Job Search March 5, 2022Rust in 2024 February 10, 2022Rust has a small standard library (and that's ok) January 29, 2022Diversity in engineering teams June 3, 202
Concurrency is not Parallelism Waza Jan 11, 2012 Rob Pike Video This talk was presented at Heroku's Waza conference in January 2012. Watch the talk on Vimeo 2 The modern world is parallel Multicore. Networks. Clouds of CPUs. Loads of users. Our technology should help. That's where concurrency comes in. 3 Go supports concurrency Go provides: concurrent execution (goroutines) synchronization and mes
Go Concurrency Patterns Rob Pike Google Video This talk was presented at Google I/O in June 2012. Watch the talk on YouTube 2 Introduction 3 Concurrency features in Go People seemed fascinated by the concurrency features of Go when the language was first announced. Questions: Why is concurrency supported? What is concurrency, anyway? Where does the idea come from? What is it good for? How do I use
If you prefer video over blog posts, here is my talk on this at GopherCon 2016: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyuFeiG3Y60 One of the strongest sides of Go programming language is a built-in concurrency based on Tony Hoare’s CSP paper. Go is designed with concurrency in mind and allows us to build complex concurrent pipelines. But have you ever wondered - how various concurrency patterns look lik
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