diff options
author | Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org> | 2020-03-14 09:44:01 -0400 |
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committer | Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org> | 2020-03-17 20:58:41 +0000 |
commit | faf1e2da2d911edc717993e8edb24fe88f99b2b5 (patch) | |
tree | 3b7d10f5f95b7bc9ca63d0591bd120b8d8f015b6 /content/go-programming-language-turns-two.article | |
parent | af5018f64e406aaa646dae066f28de57321ea5ce (diff) |
content: write real summary for each article
The pre-Markdown blog invented a summary by copying
the first paragraph of text. Often this was nonsense or
at least useless.
The new Markdown-enabled present format adds an
explicit Summary line. The conversion populated these
with the same first paragraph that the old format would
have used implicitly.
This commit rewrites them all to be proper short summaries.
Change-Id: If2e1e101b95558d7ecd53c613f733a7f89c680f1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/blog/+/223598
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'content/go-programming-language-turns-two.article')
-rw-r--r-- | content/go-programming-language-turns-two.article | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/content/go-programming-language-turns-two.article b/content/go-programming-language-turns-two.article index 3abba3b..622942e 100644 --- a/content/go-programming-language-turns-two.article +++ b/content/go-programming-language-turns-two.article @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ # The Go Programming Language turns two 10 Nov 2011 Tags: appengine, community, gopher -Summary: Two years ago a small team at Google went public with their fledgling project - the Go Programming Language. They presented a language spec, two compilers, a modest standard library, some novel tools, and plenty of accurate (albeit succinct) documentation. They watched with excitement as programmers around the world began to play with Go. The team continued to iterate and improve on what they had built, and were gradually joined by dozens - and then hundreds - of programmers from the open source community. The Go Authors went on to produce lots of libraries, new tools, and reams of [documentation](https://golang.org/doc/docs.html). They celebrated a successful year in the public eye with a [blog post](https://blog.golang.org/2010/11/go-one-year-ago-today.html) last November that concluded "Go is certainly ready for production use, but there is still room for improvement. Our focus for the immediate future is making Go programs faster and more efficient in the context of high performance systems." +Summary: Happy 2nd birthday, Go! Andrew Gerrand |