Thank you for explanation, actually I don't have any project. My proffesion on frontend development but I want to learn Rust or Go for hobby and combine with frontend.
Who knows, maybe I will switch my role in future :)
I'd say you can't go wrong either way, then, but Go is going to be easier to start with. It's always a matter of taste, but I personally have a lot more fun writing Rust than Go. Ideally, time permitting, you'd try both! Pick a simple application, try building it in both languages, and see which you prefer. Both are excellent choices.
Yeah exaclty what I’m thnking about choosing sample project and do it with both. Needed to ensure both languages are capable of web development first. Thank you :)
This is how you can do it without a framework, but you can also try Rocket, Actix-Web, or Warp for a more full-featured starting point. For Go, I'd recommend not starting with a framework at all. Just use the standard library, and only add in a third-party solution if your app grows to the point where you need it.
Thank you for explanation, actually I don't have any project. My proffesion on frontend development but I want to learn Rust or Go for hobby and combine with frontend.
Who knows, maybe I will switch my role in future :)
I'd say you can't go wrong either way, then, but Go is going to be easier to start with. It's always a matter of taste, but I personally have a lot more fun writing Rust than Go. Ideally, time permitting, you'd try both! Pick a simple application, try building it in both languages, and see which you prefer. Both are excellent choices.
Yeah exaclty what I’m thnking about choosing sample project and do it with both. Needed to ensure both languages are capable of web development first. Thank you :)
Shameless self-plug, but I wrote a post about getting started with simple framework-less webdev for Rust:
Skip the Framework: Build A Simple Rust API with Hyper
Ben Lovy ・ May 28 ・ 9 min read
This is how you can do it without a framework, but you can also try Rocket, Actix-Web, or Warp for a more full-featured starting point. For Go, I'd recommend not starting with a framework at all. Just use the standard library, and only add in a third-party solution if your app grows to the point where you need it.
Added to my reading list 😍
Appreciate for your help.