I am a long time python developer. I was trying out Go, converting an existing python app to Go. It is modular and works really well for me.
Upon creating the same structure in Go, I seem to land in cyclic import errors, a lot more than I want to. Never had any import problems in python. I never even had to use import aliases. So I may have had some cyclic imports which were not evident in python. I actually find that strange.
Anyways, I am lost, trying to fix these in Go. I have read that interfaces can be used to avoid cyclic dependencies. But I don't understand how. I didn't find any examples on this either. Can somebody help me on this?
The current python application structure is as follows:
/main.py
/settings/routes.py contains main routes depends on app1/routes.py, app2/routes.py etc
/settings/database.py function like connect() which opens db session
/settings/constants.py general constants
/apps/app1/views.py url handler functions
/apps/app1/models.py app specific database functions depends on settings/database.py
/apps/app1/routes.py app specific routes
/apps/app2/views.py url handler functions
/apps/app2/models.py app specific database functions depends on settings/database.py
/apps/app2/routes.py app specific routes
settings/database.py
has generic functions like connect()
which opens a db session. So an app in the apps package calls database.connect()
and a db session is opened.
The same is the case with settings/routes.py
it has functions that allow apps to add their sub-routes to the main route object.
The settings package is more about functions than data/constants. This contains code that is used by apps in the apps package, that would otherwise have to be duplicated in all the apps. So if I need to change the router class, for instance, I just have to change settings/router.py
and the apps will continue to work with no modifications.
question from:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20380333/cyclic-dependencies-and-interfaces 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…