Have you not seen my post about joining a chat server? Instead of waiting a day or so for each reply, people could reply instantly and hold your hand through setting things up.
On Sunday, 27 May 2018 11:37:48 UTC+8, John wrote: > > Well I guess I would just use the Go playground so it is easier. > > > On Saturday, May 26, 2018 at 8:27:59 PM UTC-7, John wrote: >> >> I tried to find the terminal button but did not find it. And also I don't >> know but does the welcome screen say welcome using or something. Because I >> can't find the blue vertical line on the right. But to make matters >> worse.... Okay I confess: I am just a kid under 15, and me and my mom just >> moved to CA two years ago. And because of that she do not know much English >> so our computer is installed from a language that is nothing alike English. >> When I downloaded VS code it is in that language, and I don't know how to >> get it to English. But the good thing is I have good proper English. >> >> On Thursday, May 24, 2018 at 8:18:21 AM UTC-7, buc...@gmail.com wrote: >>> >>> When you open VS Code there is a welcome screen. On the left side of >>> the screen you open/create a program filename to work on. Note the BLUE >>> vertical line separating the narrow left window from the larger right >>> window where you do your program editing. Toward the bottom of that window >>> you'll see another BLUE horizontal line. Below that BLUE line click on the >>> "Terminal" and to the right of that you'll see the word "1: powershell" and >>> below those you'll see the intro to Windows Powershell and a command line >>> prompt. cd to the directory where the file you are working on is located. >>> >>> Thereafter, as you go along writing your program in the upper window, >>> you can drop down into the lower command line window periodically and you >>> can type 'go build yourfilename.go' and the go compiler will attempt to >>> compile your program, showing you any errors it hits along the way. If it >>> doesn't hit any errors, the command line will return. If it shows errors, >>> return to the upper window and fix them (the errors will usually show the >>> line number that had the error). >>> >>> Open a Windows command window elsewhere (on another monitor), cd to the >>> same directory you are in in the VS Code lower window and execute the >>> command, observing the output. Go back-and-forth between the VS Code IDE >>> and the command window to change your program to get the results you want. >>> >>> Go on and accomplish great things! I have no computer science >>> background, am not particularly smart, am a noob to Go and am able to write >>> a complex web server application with Go that does exactly what I want. >>> You can, too. Persistence! There are lots of free, .pdf books online that >>> teach you Go programming. >>> >>> (notice my liberal use of the word 'Go') >>> >>> >>> On Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at 11:04:38 PM UTC-6, John wrote: >>>> >>>> Yes I did, what do you mean by top part of the screen? >>>> >>>> >>>> On Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at 6:54:47 AM UTC-7, buc...@gmail.com wrote: >>>>> >>>>> Did you get Go installed? >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.