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No commits in common. "59539c7e975e98d7eab628a3352ebb7dba81c484" and "0a0c185c06869fe620188a1e1879c9e01165ff86" have entirely different histories.

5 changed files with 4 additions and 17 deletions

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
package http package middleware
import ( import (
"net/http" "net/http"

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
package http package middleware
import ( import (
"context" "context"

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
package http package middleware
import ( import (
"net/http" "net/http"

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
package http package other
import ( import (
"fmt" "fmt"

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@ -1,7 +1,5 @@
package other package other
import "fmt"
// OutputIntoChannel takes a singular return value and sends it into the target channel. // OutputIntoChannel takes a singular return value and sends it into the target channel.
// This is a wrapper for functions where a value can't be collected from directly. // This is a wrapper for functions where a value can't be collected from directly.
// Example: goroutines // Example: goroutines
@ -9,10 +7,6 @@ func OutputIntoChannel[T any](out T, target chan T) {
target <- out target <- out
} }
// Must is a quick wrapper to ensure that a function exits without error.
// If err is not nil, it panics. Otherwise val is returned.
// The intended use is something like Must(someFunc()), where someFunc
// has the signature someFunc() (T, error), with T being whatever type needed
func Must[T any](val T, err error) T { func Must[T any](val T, err error) T {
if err != nil { if err != nil {
panic(err) panic(err)
@ -20,13 +14,6 @@ func Must[T any](val T, err error) T {
return val return val
} }
// IntoPointer returns a pointer to the given value
func IntoPointer[T any](val T) *T { func IntoPointer[T any](val T) *T {
return &val return &val
} }
// Error formats error messages to follow a common convention of
// "source: message: wrapped error"
func Error(source, message string, err error) error {
return fmt.Errorf("%s: %s: %w", source, message, err)
}