Hi.
I have been using GO for about a year and I love the language and ideas behind the language. I am also a Java developer for many years, I switched from Delphi to Java 1, the new and exciting language from Sun (a bit like GO is now from Google). In Java we have Maven and Gradle (sorry Ant) to make dependency hell more manageable so I understand the need for modules in Go. I have just installed GO 1.13 and thought I would convert an existing 'pet' project to use modules. It did NOT go well! What I need is a dummies guide to the GO module so I can build good, reliable, standards compliant GO applications. I needs to explain the new terminology in the context of a module, like 'vendor'. Not just a one liner, I NEED to understand! I know how to use Google but the quality of the articles I have read on this subject is minimal and just brushes the surface. If I have a reasonably large and complex (pet) project with local packages in it. I like to split my project in to small units with 'namespaces' to keep it manageable. These are NOT reusable components until I decide they qualify and publish on Github. - Why MUST I import them as if they are from github and then 'replace' them, and if I don’t 'MUST' then you have failed to explain this feature to me! - My local packages are part of my application. They are, I agree still 'dependencies' but they are not 'DEPENDENCIES' that I need (or even want) to import from a repository. They are part of my project. - What if I do not want to host my project on a GIT repo (Shock horror!). - Why do all imports start with github.com. Is that a requirement, what is the rational for this. - How does a 'import' resolve its 'reference'. - Should I add the go.mod and go.sum files to my repository or should the developer who cloned my project have to do a go mod init (bummer!). *Can someone please explain, properly!* We must have Modules and Repositories (like Maven Central) for the 'Enterprise' to manage dependencies but what about 'keep it simple' for the rest of us (and for that matter more mature enterprise developers like myself). Please help me get this understood. This is the sort of thing that can raise a language above the rest and I would really like that to happen. Go is brilliant… Regards Stuart -- 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. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/golang-nuts/80c7f7dd-d30b-4796-8198-d083b29f58f8%40googlegroups.com.