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Hello world with goat

This tutorial will walk you through the steps of setting up a simple goat project and importing some dependencies using the .go.yaml file. The first step is setting up the goat binary, which you can find instructions on in the main README.md. I will assume you have a binary called goat available on your PATH.

Reference

We will be building a project structure in this tutorial. I'll try to be as explicit as possible when writing this, but in case you get lost here is what the project will look like at the end of this tutorial:

/goatproject
    .go.yaml
    main.go
    /foo
        foo.go

Not too complicated (I hope!)

Initialization and .go.yaml

The first step is to create a new directory. This directory will be the root of the rest of your project and can be located anywhere you want. I'm going to put mine in /tmp:

> cd /tmp
> mkdir goatproject
> cd goatproject

Now we need to actually make this directory a goat project. To do this all that goat needs is for a .go.yaml to exist in the root, and for it to define the project's import-able path.

echo '---
path: github.com/yourusername/goatproject' > .go.yaml

You'll see the meaning of path a bit later.

Now whenever goat is used (in place of go) on the command-line and your current working directory is in goatproject or one of goatproject's children your GOPATH will be set to (assuming you put your project in /tmp like me):

/tmp/goatproject/.goat/deps:$OLDGOPATH

This isn't too important, but it may be useful in the future so there ya go.

Our project has some dependencies. Normally we would fetch these with go get, but we're too cool for that. Make your .go.yaml's contents be the following:

---
path: github.com/yourusername/goatproject
deps:
  - loc: code.google.com/p/go.example/newmath

This is the equivalent of having goat do a go get code.google.com/p/go.example/newmath inside our project. To see a full write-up on .go.yaml's dependency syntax and how to use it see the .go.yaml documentation.

To actually download the dependency do (you'll need mercurial installed):

> cd /tmp/goatproject #if you hadn't already
> goat deps

This should fetch the dependency and put it in the .goat/deps directory in your project. You shouldn't check this directory into your version control (if you're using any), it's just a utility for goat.

If in the future you change the .go.yaml you can call goat deps again and it will re-setup your .goat/deps directory with the changes.

Using the dependency

We will now import the dependency we downloaded and use it in some of our own code. Create the file foo/foo.go and in it put:

package foo

import (
    "code.google.com/p/go.example/newmath"
)

func SqrtTwo() float64 {
    return newmath.Sqrt(2)
}

func SqrtThree() float64 {
    return newmath.Sqrt(3)
}

You can see the syntax for using this library is exactly the same as if we had installed the dependency globally. This is because the dependency is in our .goat/deps directory, which is at the front of our GOPATH (when using goat).

Using our own package

We have a package in our project now, foo, that we'd like to use. Create the file main.go and put in it:

package main

import (
    "github.com/yourusername/goatproject/foo"
    "fmt"
)

func main() {
    fmt.Printf("The square root of two is: %v\n", foo.SqrtTwo())
}

The github.com/yourusername/goatproject part corresponds to the path field in the .go.yaml, and when you use it goat does a bit of magic so that when go searches for that path it finds the project's root directory, even though the goatproject directory isn't in a folder called github.com/yourusername.

Action!

To actually run our code:

> cd /tmp/goatproject #if you haven't already
> goat run main.go

That's it! goat passes through to go all commands that it doesn't recognize after setting up the environment variables, so it's super easy to get existing and new projects up and running.