Thanks a lot Sam.
A follow up question, what's the Go way of naming such functions?
Java would name it like "somethingFactory", C# would name it like
"GetHelloFunction".
what's the typical Go naming, for a factory function that generates Hello
handling function?
thx
On Tuesday, August 7, 2018 at 8:37:45 AM UTC-4, Sam Whited wrote:
>
> You'd want to use a function that returns another function and takes the
> dependencies as arguments, something like this:
>
> func Sender(b *B) func(m *tb.Message) {
> return func(m *tb.Message) {
> b.Send(m.Sender, "hello world")
> }
> }
>
> s := Sender(b)
> b.Handle("/hello", s)
> b.Handle("/hi", s)
>
>
> —Sam
>
> On Tue, Aug 7, 2018, at 07:29, Tong Sun wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Consider this function:
> >
> > b.Handle("/hello", func(m *tb.Message) {
> > b.Send(m.Sender, "hello world")
> > })
> >
> >
> > I tried to refactor the above function to func sayHi(m *tb.Message)
> {...},
> > so that I can give an alias to the above /hello command (say to define
> a
> > /hi command), but found that I cannot use bwithin it any more.
> >
> > So, how to refactor out this function?
>
>
> --
> Sam Whited
> [email protected] <javascript:>
>
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