commit | 44b8c1d75caea04a0a1feba084b164b0f9fd49eb | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Joe Bowbeer <joe.bowbeer@gmail.com> | Fri Oct 12 15:42:04 2018 +0000 |
committer | Rob Pike <r@golang.org> | Fri Oct 12 20:33:48 2018 +0000 |
tree | bb607df0d277e55d918d113f4c7306eac037bb17 | |
parent | 099a0d9cc2550885869179752dfff56fc681295c [diff] |
content: fix grammar in flowcontrol.article The lack of agreement in tense between the parallel verbs `execute` (_are executed_) and `return` in this sentence threw me. This simpler construction is more grammatically correct, according to some standards, and less confusing to me. Change-Id: I6351ce29a684d9b0d18f57b914072c43219401aa GitHub-Last-Rev: c6f29ca49a4e523c6d2cd2476f66a22fb7448881 GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/tour#629 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/141577 Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org>
A Tour of Go is an introduction to the Go programming language.
The easiest way to install the tour locally is to install a binary release of Go and then run:
$ go tool tour
To install the tour from source, first set up a workspace and then run:
$ go get golang.org/x/tour/gotour
This will place a gotour
binary in your workspace's bin
directory.
Unless otherwise noted, the go-tour source files are distributed under the BSD-style license found in the LICENSE file.
Contributions should follow the same procedure as for the Go project: https://golang.org/doc/contribute.html