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This document begins with a simple and short introduction to the fundamentals of writing clean code. Later, we'll discuss concrete refactoring examples specific to Go.
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##### A short word on `gofmt`
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I'd like to take a few sentences to clarify my stance on `gofmt` because there are plenty of things I disagree with when it comes to this tool. I prefer snake case over camel case, and I quite like my constant variables to be uppercase. And, naturally, I also have many opinions on bracket placement. *That being said*, `gofmt` does allow us to have a common standard for writing Go code, and that's a great thing. As a developer myself, I can certainly appreciate that Go programmers may feel somewhat restricted by `gofmt`, especially if they disagree with some of its rules. But in my opinion, homogenous code is more important than having complete expressive freedom.
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I'd like to take a few sentences to clarify my stance on `gofmt` because there are plenty of things I disagree with when it comes to this tool. I prefer snake case over camel case, and I quite like my constant variables to be uppercase. And, naturally, I also have many opinions on bracket placement. *That being said*, `gofmt` does allow us to have a common standard for writing Go code, and that's a great thing. As a developer myself, I can certainly appreciate that Go programmers may feel somewhat restricted by `gofmt`, especially if they disagree with some of its rules. But in my opinion, homogeneous code is more important than having complete expressive freedom.
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## Table of Contents
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* [Introduction to Clean Code](#Introduction-to-Clean-Code)
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