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The Go programming language
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What package image currently provides is a larger image consisting of many copies of a smaller image. More generally, a tiled image could be a quilt consisting of different smaller images (like Google Maps), or a technique to view a portion of enormous images without requiring the whole thing in memory. This richer construct might not ever belong in the standard library (and is definitely out of scope for Go 1), but I would like the option for image.Tiled to be its name. R=r, rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/5530062 |
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This is the source code repository for the Go programming language. For documentation about how to install and use Go, visit http://golang.org/ or load doc/install.html in your web browser. After installing Go, you can view a nicely formatted doc/install.html by running godoc --http=:6060 and then visiting http://localhost:6060/doc/install.html. Unless otherwise noted, the Go source files are distributed under the BSD-style license found in the LICENSE file. -- Binary Distribution Notes If you have just untarred a binary Go distribution, you need to set the environment variable $GOROOT to the full path of the go directory (the one containing this README). You can omit the variable if you unpack it into /usr/local/go, or if you rebuild from sources by running all.bash (see doc/install.html). You should also add the Go binary directory $GOROOT/bin to your shell's path. For example, if you extracted the tar file into $HOME/go, you might put the following in your .profile: export GOROOT=$HOME/go export PATH=$PATH:$GOROOT/bin See doc/install.html for more details.