(#pysczza) @justamoment and allows you to re-map dependencies to say for example, a forked copy of that library (which is the typical use case)
matched #vsyvcoa score:1.71
Search by:
Search by 1 mentions:
Search by 1 tags:
(#pysczza) @eaplmx @prologic Thanks! π
Seems like it worked flawlessly, once I tried everything went in place.
The only thing I noticed is that the libraries didn't auto-installed like in the documentation, they say to run a `go get LIBRARY` but after that it's all good.
I have to try making something now.
matched #taknnqa score:1.46
Search by:
Search by 2 mentions:
Search by 1 tags:
(#pysczza) @justamoment You most always either `go get ... ` or run `go mod tidyβ -- Building won't install/fetch dependencies not already cached.`
matched #76ef7ba score:1.67
Search by:
Search by 1 mentions:
Search by 1 tags:
(#pysczza) @prologic yes I discovered first hand. π
matched #b3t3uma score:1.89
Search by:
Search by 1 mentions:
Search by 1 tags:
(#pysczza) @justamoment π
matched #gycsz2q score:2
Search by:
Search by 1 mentions:
Search by 1 tags:
(#pysczza) @prologic the `go get` and `go mod tidy` wont fetch new changes. that's all a manual affair AFAIK
matched #czmzp7a score:1.73
Search by:
Search by 1 mentions:
Search by 1 tags:
(#pysczza) ahh this is useful the go culture doesn't typically have large dependency graphs like Ruby or JS.
matched #35fkjoa score:1.77
Search by:
Search by 1 tags:
(#pysczza) @xuu This is correct. The only way to update a dependency is to `go get -u ...` that particular dependency.
matched #m2ermdq score:1.77
Search by:
Search by 1 mentions:
Search by 1 tags: