Effective Go (https://golang.org/doc/effective_go.html) covers most of it 
for new Go programmers experienced in other languages, then Google Search + 
stackoverflow.com, github.com issues, and golang-nuts answers most 
everything else in my experience.

I can't speak for beginner programmers but I would recommend Go as a first 
language.

Matt

On Saturday, December 16, 2017 at 5:36:58 PM UTC-6, Terry McKenna wrote:
>
> I've not read the book myself but it's a new title and might be worth the 
> $25: "Sams Teach Yourself Go in 24 hours"
>
> *"In just 24 sessions of one hour or less, Sams Teach Yourself Go in 24 
> Hours will help new and experienced programmers build software that’s 
> simpler, more reliable, and far more scalable. This book’s straightforward, 
> step-by-step approach guides you from setting up your environment through 
> testing and deploying powerful solutions."*
>
> ISBN-13: 978-0672338038 
> ISBN-10: 0672338033 
>
>
> On Saturday, January 17, 2015 at 4:15:08 AM UTC-5, Roelof Wobben wrote:
>
>> Hello, 
>>
>> I like to learn Go as a absolute beginner. 
>> What is the best way to learn it. I like to have many exercises because 
>> that is the best way I learn. 
>>
>> Second question :  Does anyone know if I can use Go on nitrious.io, or 
>> koding,com ? 
>>
>> Roelof
>>
>>

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