| name | use-modern-go |
| description | Apply modern Go syntax guidelines based on project's Go version. Use when user ask for modern Go code guidelines. |
| adapted-from | https://raw.githubusercontent.com/JetBrains/go-modern-guidelines/refs/heads/main/claude/modern-go-guidelines/skills/use-modern-go/SKILL.md |
Modern Go Guidelines
Detected Go Version
!grep -rh "^go " --include="go.mod" . 2>/dev/null | cut -d' ' -f2 | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr | head -1 | xargs | cut -d' ' -f2 | grep . || echo unknown
How to Use This Skill
DO NOT search for go.mod files or try to detect the version yourself. Use ONLY the version shown above.
If version detected (not "unknown"):
- Say: "This project is using Go X.XX, so I’ll stick to modern Go best practices and freely use language features up to and including this version. If you’d prefer a different target version, just let me know."
- Do NOT list features, do NOT ask for confirmation
If version is "unknown":
- Say: "Could not detect Go version in this repository"
- Use AskUserQuestion: "Which Go version should I target?" → [1.23] / [1.24] / [1.25] / [1.26]
When writing Go code, use ALL features from this document up to the target version:
- Prefer modern built-ins and packages (
slices, maps, cmp) over legacy patterns
- Never use features from newer Go versions than the target
- Never use outdated patterns when a modern alternative is available
Checking documentation of dependencies
When you need to check structure or documentation of a dependency, prefer to check the source directly.
Use go env to identify where modules are downloaded, and use find, grep, ripgrep, depending on which is available and suitable.
For example
$ find ~/go/pkg/mod/github.com/slack-go/slack@v0.19.0 -name "*.go" -path "*/socketmode/*" | head -10
Features by Go Version
Go 1.0+
time.Since: time.Since(start) instead of time.Now().Sub(start)
Go 1.8+
time.Until: time.Until(deadline) instead of deadline.Sub(time.Now())
Go 1.13+
errors.Is: errors.Is(err, target) instead of err == target (works with wrapped errors)
Go 1.18+
any: Use any instead of interface{}
bytes.Cut: before, after, found := bytes.Cut(b, sep) instead of Index+slice
strings.Cut: before, after, found := strings.Cut(s, sep)
Go 1.19+
fmt.Appendf: buf = fmt.Appendf(buf, "x=%d", x) instead of []byte(fmt.Sprintf(...))
atomic.Bool/atomic.Int64/atomic.Pointer[T]: Type-safe atomics instead of atomic.StoreInt32
var flag atomic.Bool
flag.Store(true)
if flag.Load() { ... }
var ptr atomic.Pointer[Config]
ptr.Store(cfg)
Go 1.20+
strings.Clone: strings.Clone(s) to copy string without sharing memory
bytes.Clone: bytes.Clone(b) to copy byte slice
strings.CutPrefix/CutSuffix: if rest, ok := strings.CutPrefix(s, "pre:"); ok { ... }
errors.Join: errors.Join(err1, err2) to combine multiple errors
context.WithCancelCause: ctx, cancel := context.WithCancelCause(parent) then cancel(err)
context.Cause: context.Cause(ctx) to get the error that caused cancellation
Go 1.21+
Built-ins:
min/max: max(a, b) instead of if/else comparisons
clear: clear(m) to delete all map entries, clear(s) to zero slice elements
slices package:
slices.Contains: slices.Contains(items, x) instead of manual loops
slices.Index: slices.Index(items, x) returns index (-1 if not found)
slices.IndexFunc: slices.IndexFunc(items, func(item T) bool { return item.ID == id })
slices.SortFunc: slices.SortFunc(items, func(a, b T) int { return cmp.Compare(a.X, b.X) })
slices.Sort: slices.Sort(items) for ordered types
slices.Max/slices.Min: slices.Max(items) instead of manual loop
slices.Reverse: slices.Reverse(items) instead of manual swap loop
slices.Compact: slices.Compact(items) removes consecutive duplicates in-place
slices.Clip: slices.Clip(s) removes unused capacity
slices.Clone: slices.Clone(s) creates a copy
maps package:
maps.Clone: maps.Clone(m) instead of manual map iteration
maps.Copy: maps.Copy(dst, src) copies entries from src to dst
maps.DeleteFunc: maps.DeleteFunc(m, func(k K, v V) bool { return condition })
sync package:
sync.OnceFunc: f := sync.OnceFunc(func() { ... }) instead of sync.Once + wrapper
sync.OnceValue: getter := sync.OnceValue(func() T { return computeValue() })
context package:
context.AfterFunc: stop := context.AfterFunc(ctx, cleanup) runs cleanup on cancellation
context.WithTimeoutCause: ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeoutCause(parent, d, err)
context.WithDeadlineCause: Similar with deadline instead of duration
Go 1.22+
Loops:
for i := range n: for i := range len(items) instead of for i := 0; i < len(items); i++
- Loop variables are now safe to capture in goroutines (each iteration has its own copy)
cmp package:
cmp.Or: cmp.Or(flag, env, config, "default") returns first non-zero value
name := os.Getenv("NAME")
if name == "" {
name = "default"
}
name := cmp.Or(os.Getenv("NAME"), "default")
reflect package:
reflect.TypeFor: reflect.TypeFor[T]() instead of reflect.TypeOf((*T)(nil)).Elem()
net/http:
- Enhanced
http.ServeMux patterns: mux.HandleFunc("GET /api/{id}", handler) with method and path params
r.PathValue("id") to get path parameters
Go 1.23+
maps.Keys(m) / maps.Values(m) return iterators
slices.Collect(iter) not manual loop to build slice from iterator
slices.Sorted(iter) to collect and sort in one step
keys := slices.Collect(maps.Keys(m))
sortedKeys := slices.Sorted(maps.Keys(m))
for k := range maps.Keys(m) { process(k) }
time package
time.Tick: Use time.Tick freely — as of Go 1.23, the garbage collector can recover unreferenced tickers, even if they haven't been stopped. The Stop method is no longer necessary to help the garbage collector. There is no longer any reason to prefer NewTicker when Tick will do.
Go 1.24+
t.Context() not context.WithCancel(context.Background()) in tests.
ALWAYS use t.Context() when a test function needs a context.
Before:
func TestFoo(t *testing.T) {
ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(context.Background())
defer cancel()
result := doSomething(ctx)
}
After:
func TestFoo(t *testing.T) {
ctx := t.Context()
result := doSomething(ctx)
}
omitzero not omitempty in JSON struct tags.
ALWAYS use omitzero for time.Duration, time.Time, structs, slices, maps.
Before:
type Config struct {
Timeout time.Duration `json:"timeout,omitempty"`
}
After:
type Config struct {
Timeout time.Duration `json:"timeout,omitzero"`
}
b.Loop() not for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ in benchmarks.
ALWAYS use b.Loop() for the main loop in benchmark functions.
Before:
func BenchmarkFoo(b *testing.B) {
for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
doWork()
}
}
After:
func BenchmarkFoo(b *testing.B) {
for b.Loop() {
doWork()
}
}
strings.SplitSeq not strings.Split when iterating.
ALWAYS use SplitSeq/FieldsSeq when iterating over split results in a for-range loop.
Before:
for _, part := range strings.Split(s, ",") {
process(part)
}
After:
for part := range strings.SplitSeq(s, ",") {
process(part)
}
Also: strings.FieldsSeq, bytes.SplitSeq, bytes.FieldsSeq.
Go 1.25+
wg.Go(fn) not wg.Add(1) + go func() { defer wg.Done(); ... }().
ALWAYS use wg.Go() when spawning goroutines with sync.WaitGroup.
Before:
var wg sync.WaitGroup
for _, item := range items {
wg.Add(1)
go func() {
defer wg.Done()
process(item)
}()
}
wg.Wait()
After:
var wg sync.WaitGroup
for _, item := range items {
wg.Go(func() {
process(item)
})
}
wg.Wait()
Go 1.26+
new(val) not x := val; &x — returns pointer to any value.
Go 1.26 extends new() to accept expressions, not just types.
Type is inferred: new(0) → *int, new("s") → *string, new(T{}) → *T.
DO NOT use x := val; &x pattern — always use new(val) directly.
DO NOT use redundant casts like new(int(0)) — just write new(0).
Common use case: struct fields with pointer types.
Before:
timeout := 30
debug := true
cfg := Config{
Timeout: &timeout,
Debug: &debug,
}
After:
cfg := Config{
Timeout: new(30),
Debug: new(true),
}
errors.AsType[T](err) not errors.As(err, &target).
ALWAYS use errors.AsType when checking if error matches a specific type.
Before:
var pathErr *os.PathError
if errors.As(err, &pathErr) {
handle(pathErr)
}
After:
if pathErr, ok := errors.AsType[*os.PathError](err); ok {
handle(pathErr)
}