▲ 34 r/golang
Effective Go still worth to read?
I done everything in "Getting Started" section, so I intended to start reading the "Effective Go" page, but I got the note:
"This document was written for Go's release in 2009 and is not actively updated. While it remains a good guide for using the core language, it does not cover significant changes to the language (generics), ecosystem (modules), or libraries added since. See issue 28782 for context. For a complete list of changes, see the release notes."
So for you guys with great experience in the language, still worth to read it or it's too old for nowadays?
u/Better-Top-399 — 21 hours ago