github.com/yukk001/go1.10.8@v0.0.0-20190813125351-6df2d3982e20/doc/articles/wiki/index.html (about)

     1  <!--{
     2  	"Title": "Writing Web Applications",
     3  	"Template": true
     4  }-->
     5  
     6  <h2>Introduction</h2>
     7  
     8  <p>
     9  Covered in this tutorial:
    10  </p>
    11  <ul>
    12  <li>Creating a data structure with load and save methods</li>
    13  <li>Using the <code>net/http</code> package to build web applications
    14  <li>Using the <code>html/template</code> package to process HTML templates</li>
    15  <li>Using the <code>regexp</code> package to validate user input</li>
    16  <li>Using closures</li>
    17  </ul>
    18  
    19  <p>
    20  Assumed knowledge:
    21  </p>
    22  <ul>
    23  <li>Programming experience</li>
    24  <li>Understanding of basic web technologies (HTTP, HTML)</li>
    25  <li>Some UNIX/DOS command-line knowledge</li>
    26  </ul>
    27  
    28  <h2>Getting Started</h2>
    29  
    30  <p>
    31  At present, you need to have a FreeBSD, Linux, OS X, or Windows machine to run Go.
    32  We will use <code>$</code> to represent the command prompt.
    33  </p>
    34  
    35  <p>
    36  Install Go (see the <a href="/doc/install">Installation Instructions</a>).
    37  </p>
    38  
    39  <p>
    40  Make a new directory for this tutorial inside your <code>GOPATH</code> and cd to it:
    41  </p>
    42  
    43  <pre>
    44  $ mkdir gowiki
    45  $ cd gowiki
    46  </pre>
    47  
    48  <p>
    49  Create a file named <code>wiki.go</code>, open it in your favorite editor, and
    50  add the following lines:
    51  </p>
    52  
    53  <pre>
    54  package main
    55  
    56  import (
    57  	"fmt"
    58  	"io/ioutil"
    59  )
    60  </pre>
    61  
    62  <p>
    63  We import the <code>fmt</code> and <code>ioutil</code> packages from the Go
    64  standard library. Later, as we implement additional functionality, we will
    65  add more packages to this <code>import</code> declaration.
    66  </p>
    67  
    68  <h2>Data Structures</h2>
    69  
    70  <p>
    71  Let's start by defining the data structures. A wiki consists of a series of
    72  interconnected pages, each of which has a title and a body (the page content).
    73  Here, we define <code>Page</code> as a struct with two fields representing
    74  the title and body.
    75  </p>
    76  
    77  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1.go" `/^type Page/` `/}/`}}
    78  
    79  <p>
    80  The type <code>[]byte</code> means "a <code>byte</code> slice".
    81  (See <a href="/doc/articles/slices_usage_and_internals.html">Slices: usage and
    82  internals</a> for more on slices.)
    83  The <code>Body</code> element is a <code>[]byte</code> rather than
    84  <code>string</code> because that is the type expected by the <code>io</code>
    85  libraries we will use, as you'll see below.
    86  </p>
    87  
    88  <p>
    89  The <code>Page</code> struct describes how page data will be stored in memory.
    90  But what about persistent storage? We can address that by creating a
    91  <code>save</code> method on <code>Page</code>:
    92  </p>
    93  
    94  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1.go" `/^func.*Page.*save/` `/}/`}}
    95  
    96  <p>
    97  This method's signature reads: "This is a method named <code>save</code> that
    98  takes as its receiver <code>p</code>, a pointer to <code>Page</code> . It takes
    99  no parameters, and returns a value of type <code>error</code>."
   100  </p>
   101  
   102  <p>
   103  This method will save the <code>Page</code>'s <code>Body</code> to a text
   104  file. For simplicity, we will use the <code>Title</code> as the file name.
   105  </p>
   106  
   107  <p>
   108  The <code>save</code> method returns an <code>error</code> value because
   109  that is the return type of <code>WriteFile</code> (a standard library function
   110  that writes a byte slice to a file).  The <code>save</code> method returns the
   111  error value, to let the application handle it should anything go wrong while
   112  writing the file.  If all goes well, <code>Page.save()</code> will return
   113  <code>nil</code> (the zero-value for pointers, interfaces, and some other
   114  types).
   115  </p>
   116  
   117  <p>
   118  The octal integer literal <code>0600</code>, passed as the third parameter to
   119  <code>WriteFile</code>, indicates that the file should be created with
   120  read-write permissions for the current user only. (See the Unix man page
   121  <code>open(2)</code> for details.)
   122  </p>
   123  
   124  <p>
   125  In addition to saving pages, we will want to load pages, too:
   126  </p>
   127  
   128  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1-noerror.go" `/^func loadPage/` `/^}/`}}
   129  
   130  <p>
   131  The function <code>loadPage</code> constructs the file name from the title
   132  parameter, reads the file's contents into a new variable <code>body</code>, and
   133  returns a pointer to a <code>Page</code> literal constructed with the proper
   134  title and body values.
   135  </p>
   136  
   137  <p>
   138  Functions can return multiple values. The standard library function
   139  <code>io.ReadFile</code> returns <code>[]byte</code> and <code>error</code>.
   140  In <code>loadPage</code>, error isn't being handled yet; the "blank identifier"
   141  represented by the underscore (<code>_</code>) symbol is used to throw away the
   142  error return value (in essence, assigning the value to nothing).
   143  </p>
   144  
   145  <p>
   146  But what happens if <code>ReadFile</code> encounters an error?  For example,
   147  the file might not exist. We should not ignore such errors.  Let's modify the
   148  function to return <code>*Page</code> and <code>error</code>.
   149  </p>
   150  
   151  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1.go" `/^func loadPage/` `/^}/`}}
   152  
   153  <p>
   154  Callers of this function can now check the second parameter; if it is
   155  <code>nil</code> then it has successfully loaded a Page. If not, it will be an
   156  <code>error</code> that can be handled by the caller (see the
   157  <a href="/ref/spec#Errors">language specification</a> for details).
   158  </p>
   159  
   160  <p>
   161  At this point we have a simple data structure and the ability to save to and
   162  load from a file. Let's write a <code>main</code> function to test what we've
   163  written:
   164  </p>
   165  
   166  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1.go" `/^func main/` `/^}/`}}
   167  
   168  <p>
   169  After compiling and executing this code, a file named <code>TestPage.txt</code>
   170  would be created, containing the contents of <code>p1</code>. The file would
   171  then be read into the struct <code>p2</code>, and its <code>Body</code> element
   172  printed to the screen.
   173  </p>
   174  
   175  <p>
   176  You can compile and run the program like this:
   177  </p>
   178  
   179  <pre>
   180  $ go build wiki.go
   181  $ ./wiki
   182  This is a sample Page.
   183  </pre>
   184  
   185  <p>
   186  (If you're using Windows you must type "<code>wiki</code>" without the
   187  "<code>./</code>" to run the program.)
   188  </p>
   189  
   190  <p>
   191  <a href="part1.go">Click here to view the code we've written so far.</a>
   192  </p>
   193  
   194  <h2>Introducing the <code>net/http</code> package (an interlude)</h2>
   195  
   196  <p>
   197  Here's a full working example of a simple web server:
   198  </p>
   199  
   200  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/http-sample.go"}}
   201  
   202  <p>
   203  The <code>main</code> function begins with a call to
   204  <code>http.HandleFunc</code>, which tells the <code>http</code> package to
   205  handle all requests to the web root (<code>"/"</code>) with
   206  <code>handler</code>.
   207  </p>
   208  
   209  <p>
   210  It then calls <code>http.ListenAndServe</code>, specifying that it should
   211  listen on port 8080 on any interface (<code>":8080"</code>). (Don't
   212  worry about its second parameter, <code>nil</code>, for now.)
   213  This function will block until the program is terminated.
   214  </p>
   215  
   216  <p>
   217  <code>ListenAndServe</code> always returns an error, since it only returns when an
   218  unexpected error occurs.
   219  In order to log that error we wrap the function call with <code>log.Fatal</code>.
   220  </p>
   221  
   222  <p>
   223  The function <code>handler</code> is of the type <code>http.HandlerFunc</code>.
   224  It takes an <code>http.ResponseWriter</code> and an <code>http.Request</code> as
   225  its arguments.
   226  </p>
   227  
   228  <p>
   229  An <code>http.ResponseWriter</code> value assembles the HTTP server's response; by writing
   230  to it, we send data to the HTTP client.
   231  </p>
   232  
   233  <p>
   234  An <code>http.Request</code> is a data structure that represents the client
   235  HTTP request. <code>r.URL.Path</code> is the path component
   236  of the request URL. The trailing <code>[1:]</code> means
   237  "create a sub-slice of <code>Path</code> from the 1st character to the end."
   238  This drops the leading "/" from the path name.
   239  </p>
   240  
   241  <p>
   242  If you run this program and access the URL:
   243  </p>
   244  <pre>http://localhost:8080/monkeys</pre>
   245  <p>
   246  the program would present a page containing:
   247  </p>
   248  <pre>Hi there, I love monkeys!</pre>
   249  
   250  <h2>Using <code>net/http</code> to serve wiki pages</h2>
   251  
   252  <p>
   253  To use the <code>net/http</code> package, it must be imported:
   254  </p>
   255  
   256  <pre>
   257  import (
   258  	"fmt"
   259  	"io/ioutil"
   260  	<b>"net/http"</b>
   261  )
   262  </pre>
   263  
   264  <p>
   265  Let's create a handler, <code>viewHandler</code> that will allow users to
   266  view a wiki page. It will handle URLs prefixed with "/view/".
   267  </p>
   268  
   269  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part2.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   270  
   271  <p>
   272  Again, note the use of <code>_</code> to ignore the <code>error</code>
   273  return value from <code>loadPage</code>. This is done here for simplicity
   274  and generally considered bad practice. We will attend to this later.
   275  </p>
   276  
   277  <p>
   278  First, this function extracts the page title from <code>r.URL.Path</code>,
   279  the path component of the request URL.
   280  The <code>Path</code> is re-sliced with <code>[len("/view/"):]</code> to drop
   281  the leading <code>"/view/"</code> component of the request path.
   282  This is because the path will invariably begin with <code>"/view/"</code>,
   283  which is not part of the page's title.
   284  </p>
   285  
   286  <p>
   287  The function then loads the page data, formats the page with a string of simple
   288  HTML, and writes it to <code>w</code>, the <code>http.ResponseWriter</code>.
   289  </p>
   290  
   291  <p>
   292  To use this handler, we rewrite our <code>main</code> function to
   293  initialize <code>http</code> using the <code>viewHandler</code> to handle
   294  any requests under the path <code>/view/</code>.
   295  </p>
   296  
   297  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part2.go" `/^func main/` `/^}/`}}
   298  
   299  <p>
   300  <a href="part2.go">Click here to view the code we've written so far.</a>
   301  </p>
   302  
   303  <p>
   304  Let's create some page data (as <code>test.txt</code>), compile our code, and
   305  try serving a wiki page.
   306  </p>
   307  
   308  <p>
   309  Open <code>test.txt</code> file in your editor, and save the string "Hello world" (without quotes)
   310  in it.
   311  </p>
   312  
   313  <pre>
   314  $ go build wiki.go
   315  $ ./wiki
   316  </pre>
   317  
   318  <p>
   319  (If you're using Windows you must type "<code>wiki</code>" without the
   320  "<code>./</code>" to run the program.)
   321  </p>
   322  
   323  <p>
   324  With this web server running, a visit to <code><a
   325  href="http://localhost:8080/view/test">http://localhost:8080/view/test</a></code>
   326  should show a page titled "test" containing the words "Hello world".
   327  </p>
   328  
   329  <h2>Editing Pages</h2>
   330  
   331  <p>
   332  A wiki is not a wiki without the ability to edit pages. Let's create two new
   333  handlers: one named <code>editHandler</code> to display an 'edit page' form,
   334  and the other named <code>saveHandler</code> to save the data entered via the
   335  form.
   336  </p>
   337  
   338  <p>
   339  First, we add them to <code>main()</code>:
   340  </p>
   341  
   342  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^func main/` `/^}/`}}
   343  
   344  <p>
   345  The function <code>editHandler</code> loads the page
   346  (or, if it doesn't exist, create an empty <code>Page</code> struct),
   347  and displays an HTML form.
   348  </p>
   349  
   350  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/notemplate.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   351  
   352  <p>
   353  This function will work fine, but all that hard-coded HTML is ugly.
   354  Of course, there is a better way.
   355  </p>
   356  
   357  <h2>The <code>html/template</code> package</h2>
   358  
   359  <p>
   360  The <code>html/template</code> package is part of the Go standard library.
   361  We can use <code>html/template</code> to keep the HTML in a separate file,
   362  allowing us to change the layout of our edit page without modifying the
   363  underlying Go code.
   364  </p>
   365  
   366  <p>
   367  First, we must add <code>html/template</code> to the list of imports. We
   368  also won't be using <code>fmt</code> anymore, so we have to remove that.
   369  </p>
   370  
   371  <pre>
   372  import (
   373  	<b>"html/template"</b>
   374  	"io/ioutil"
   375  	"net/http"
   376  )
   377  </pre>
   378  
   379  <p>
   380  Let's create a template file containing the HTML form.
   381  Open a new file named <code>edit.html</code>, and add the following lines:
   382  </p>
   383  
   384  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/edit.html"}}
   385  
   386  <p>
   387  Modify <code>editHandler</code> to use the template, instead of the hard-coded
   388  HTML:
   389  </p>
   390  
   391  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noerror.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   392  
   393  <p>
   394  The function <code>template.ParseFiles</code> will read the contents of
   395  <code>edit.html</code> and return a <code>*template.Template</code>.
   396  </p>
   397  
   398  <p>
   399  The method <code>t.Execute</code> executes the template, writing the
   400  generated HTML to the <code>http.ResponseWriter</code>.
   401  The <code>.Title</code> and <code>.Body</code> dotted identifiers refer to
   402  <code>p.Title</code> and <code>p.Body</code>.
   403  </p>
   404  
   405  <p>
   406  Template directives are enclosed in double curly braces.
   407  The <code>printf "%s" .Body</code> instruction is a function call
   408  that outputs <code>.Body</code> as a string instead of a stream of bytes,
   409  the same as a call to <code>fmt.Printf</code>.
   410  The <code>html/template</code> package helps guarantee that only safe and
   411  correct-looking HTML is generated by template actions. For instance, it
   412  automatically escapes any greater than sign (<code>&gt;</code>), replacing it
   413  with <code>&amp;gt;</code>, to make sure user data does not corrupt the form
   414  HTML.
   415  </p>
   416  
   417  <p>
   418  Since we're working with templates now, let's create a template for our
   419  <code>viewHandler</code> called <code>view.html</code>:
   420  </p>
   421  
   422  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/view.html"}}
   423  
   424  <p>
   425  Modify <code>viewHandler</code> accordingly:
   426  </p>
   427  
   428  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noerror.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   429  
   430  <p>
   431  Notice that we've used almost exactly the same templating code in both
   432  handlers. Let's remove this duplication by moving the templating code
   433  to its own function:
   434  </p>
   435  
   436  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-template.go" `/^func renderTemplate/` `/^}/`}}
   437  
   438  <p>
   439  And modify the handlers to use that function:
   440  </p>
   441  
   442  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-template.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   443  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-template.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   444  
   445  <p>
   446  If we comment out the registration of our unimplemented save handler in
   447  <code>main</code>, we can once again build and test our program.
   448  <a href="part3.go">Click here to view the code we've written so far.</a>
   449  </p>
   450  
   451  <h2>Handling non-existent pages</h2>
   452  
   453  <p>
   454  What if you visit <a href="http://localhost:8080/view/APageThatDoesntExist">
   455  <code>/view/APageThatDoesntExist</code></a>? You'll see a page containing
   456  HTML. This is because it ignores the error return value from
   457  <code>loadPage</code> and continues to try and fill out the template
   458  with no data. Instead, if the requested Page doesn't exist, it should
   459  redirect the client to the edit Page so the content may be created:
   460  </p>
   461  
   462  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part3-errorhandling.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   463  
   464  <p>
   465  The <code>http.Redirect</code> function adds an HTTP status code of
   466  <code>http.StatusFound</code> (302) and a <code>Location</code>
   467  header to the HTTP response.
   468  </p>
   469  
   470  <h2>Saving Pages</h2>
   471  
   472  <p>
   473  The function <code>saveHandler</code> will handle the submission of forms
   474  located on the edit pages. After uncommenting the related line in
   475  <code>main</code>, let's implement the handler:
   476  </p>
   477  
   478  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-template.go" `/^func saveHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   479  
   480  <p>
   481  The page title (provided in the URL) and the form's only field,
   482  <code>Body</code>, are stored in a new <code>Page</code>.
   483  The <code>save()</code> method is then called to write the data to a file,
   484  and the client is redirected to the <code>/view/</code> page.
   485  </p>
   486  
   487  <p>
   488  The value returned by <code>FormValue</code> is of type <code>string</code>.
   489  We must convert that value to <code>[]byte</code> before it will fit into
   490  the <code>Page</code> struct. We use <code>[]byte(body)</code> to perform
   491  the conversion.
   492  </p>
   493  
   494  <h2>Error handling</h2>
   495  
   496  <p>
   497  There are several places in our program where errors are being ignored.  This
   498  is bad practice, not least because when an error does occur the program will
   499  have unintended behavior. A better solution is to handle the errors and return
   500  an error message to the user. That way if something does go wrong, the server
   501  will function exactly how we want and the user can be notified.
   502  </p>
   503  
   504  <p>
   505  First, let's handle the errors in <code>renderTemplate</code>:
   506  </p>
   507  
   508  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-parsetemplate.go" `/^func renderTemplate/` `/^}/`}}
   509  
   510  <p>
   511  The <code>http.Error</code> function sends a specified HTTP response code
   512  (in this case "Internal Server Error") and error message.
   513  Already the decision to put this in a separate function is paying off.
   514  </p>
   515  
   516  <p>
   517  Now let's fix up <code>saveHandler</code>:
   518  </p>
   519  
   520  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/part3-errorhandling.go" `/^func saveHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   521  
   522  <p>
   523  Any errors that occur during <code>p.save()</code> will be reported
   524  to the user.
   525  </p>
   526  
   527  <h2>Template caching</h2>
   528  
   529  <p>
   530  There is an inefficiency in this code: <code>renderTemplate</code> calls
   531  <code>ParseFiles</code> every time a page is rendered.
   532  A better approach would be to call <code>ParseFiles</code> once at program
   533  initialization, parsing all templates into a single <code>*Template</code>.
   534  Then we can use the
   535  <a href="/pkg/html/template/#Template.ExecuteTemplate"><code>ExecuteTemplate</code></a>
   536  method to render a specific template.
   537  </p>
   538  
   539  <p>
   540  First we create a global variable named <code>templates</code>, and initialize
   541  it with <code>ParseFiles</code>.
   542  </p>
   543  
   544  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/var templates/`}}
   545  
   546  <p>
   547  The function <code>template.Must</code> is a convenience wrapper that panics
   548  when passed a non-nil <code>error</code> value, and otherwise returns the
   549  <code>*Template</code> unaltered. A panic is appropriate here; if the templates
   550  can't be loaded the only sensible thing to do is exit the program.
   551  </p>
   552  
   553  <p>
   554  The <code>ParseFiles</code> function takes any number of string arguments that
   555  identify our template files, and parses those files into templates that are
   556  named after the base file name. If we were to add more templates to our
   557  program, we would add their names to the <code>ParseFiles</code> call's
   558  arguments.
   559  </p>
   560  
   561  <p>
   562  We then modify the <code>renderTemplate</code> function to call the
   563  <code>templates.ExecuteTemplate</code> method with the name of the appropriate
   564  template:
   565  </p>
   566  
   567  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/func renderTemplate/` `/^}/`}}
   568  
   569  <p>
   570  Note that the template name is the template file name, so we must
   571  append <code>".html"</code> to the <code>tmpl</code> argument.
   572  </p>
   573  
   574  <h2>Validation</h2>
   575  
   576  <p>
   577  As you may have observed, this program has a serious security flaw: a user
   578  can supply an arbitrary path to be read/written on the server. To mitigate
   579  this, we can write a function to validate the title with a regular expression.
   580  </p>
   581  
   582  <p>
   583  First, add <code>"regexp"</code> to the <code>import</code> list.
   584  Then we can create a global variable to store our validation 
   585  expression:
   586  </p>
   587  
   588  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^var validPath/`}}
   589  
   590  <p>
   591  The function <code>regexp.MustCompile</code> will parse and compile the
   592  regular expression, and return a <code>regexp.Regexp</code>.
   593  <code>MustCompile</code> is distinct from <code>Compile</code> in that it will
   594  panic if the expression compilation fails, while <code>Compile</code> returns
   595  an <code>error</code> as a second parameter.
   596  </p>
   597  
   598  <p>
   599  Now, let's write a function that uses the <code>validPath</code>
   600  expression to validate path and extract the page title:
   601  </p>
   602  
   603  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/func getTitle/` `/^}/`}}
   604  
   605  <p>
   606  If the title is valid, it will be returned along with a <code>nil</code>
   607  error value. If the title is invalid, the function will write a
   608  "404 Not Found" error to the HTTP connection, and return an error to the
   609  handler. To create a new error, we have to import the <code>errors</code>
   610  package.
   611  </p>
   612  
   613  <p>
   614  Let's put a call to <code>getTitle</code> in each of the handlers:
   615  </p>
   616  
   617  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   618  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   619  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^func saveHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   620  
   621  <h2>Introducing Function Literals and Closures</h2>
   622  
   623  <p>
   624  Catching the error condition in each handler introduces a lot of repeated code.
   625  What if we could wrap each of the handlers in a function that does this
   626  validation and error checking? Go's
   627  <a href="/ref/spec#Function_literals">function
   628  literals</a> provide a powerful means of abstracting functionality
   629  that can help us here.
   630  </p>
   631  
   632  <p>
   633  First, we re-write the function definition of each of the handlers to accept
   634  a title string:
   635  </p>
   636  
   637  <pre>
   638  func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string)
   639  func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string)
   640  func saveHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string)
   641  </pre>
   642  
   643  <p>
   644  Now let's define a wrapper function that <i>takes a function of the above
   645  type</i>, and returns a function of type <code>http.HandlerFunc</code>
   646  (suitable to be passed to the function <code>http.HandleFunc</code>):
   647  </p>
   648  
   649  <pre>
   650  func makeHandler(fn func (http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request, string)) http.HandlerFunc {
   651  	return func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
   652  		// Here we will extract the page title from the Request,
   653  		// and call the provided handler 'fn'
   654  	}
   655  }
   656  </pre>
   657  
   658  <p>
   659  The returned function is called a closure because it encloses values defined
   660  outside of it. In this case, the variable <code>fn</code> (the single argument
   661  to <code>makeHandler</code>) is enclosed by the closure. The variable
   662  <code>fn</code> will be one of our save, edit, or view handlers.
   663  </p>
   664  
   665  <p>
   666  Now we can take the code from <code>getTitle</code> and use it here
   667  (with some minor modifications):
   668  </p>
   669  
   670  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/func makeHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   671  
   672  <p>
   673  The closure returned by <code>makeHandler</code> is a function that takes
   674  an <code>http.ResponseWriter</code> and <code>http.Request</code> (in other
   675  words, an <code>http.HandlerFunc</code>).
   676  The closure extracts the <code>title</code> from the request path, and
   677  validates it with the <code>TitleValidator</code> regexp. If the
   678  <code>title</code> is invalid, an error will be written to the
   679  <code>ResponseWriter</code> using the <code>http.NotFound</code> function.
   680  If the <code>title</code> is valid, the enclosed handler function
   681  <code>fn</code> will be called with the <code>ResponseWriter</code>,
   682  <code>Request</code>, and <code>title</code> as arguments.
   683  </p>
   684  
   685  <p>
   686  Now we can wrap the handler functions with <code>makeHandler</code> in
   687  <code>main</code>, before they are registered with the <code>http</code>
   688  package:
   689  </p>
   690  
   691  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/func main/` `/^}/`}}
   692  
   693  <p>
   694  Finally we remove the calls to <code>getTitle</code> from the handler functions,
   695  making them much simpler:
   696  </p>
   697  
   698  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   699  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   700  {{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/^func saveHandler/` `/^}/`}}
   701  
   702  <h2>Try it out!</h2>
   703  
   704  <p>
   705  <a href="final.go">Click here to view the final code listing.</a>
   706  </p>
   707  
   708  <p>
   709  Recompile the code, and run the app:
   710  </p>
   711  
   712  <pre>
   713  $ go build wiki.go
   714  $ ./wiki
   715  </pre>
   716  
   717  <p>
   718  Visiting <a href="http://localhost:8080/view/ANewPage">http://localhost:8080/view/ANewPage</a>
   719  should present you with the page edit form. You should then be able to
   720  enter some text, click 'Save', and be redirected to the newly created page.
   721  </p>
   722  
   723  <h2>Other tasks</h2>
   724  
   725  <p>
   726  Here are some simple tasks you might want to tackle on your own:
   727  </p>
   728  
   729  <ul>
   730  <li>Store templates in <code>tmpl/</code> and page data in <code>data/</code>.
   731  <li>Add a handler to make the web root redirect to
   732  	<code>/view/FrontPage</code>.</li>
   733  <li>Spruce up the page templates by making them valid HTML and adding some
   734  	CSS rules.</li>
   735  <li>Implement inter-page linking by converting instances of
   736  	<code>[PageName]</code> to <br>
   737  	<code>&lt;a href="/view/PageName"&gt;PageName&lt;/a&gt;</code>.
   738  	(hint: you could use <code>regexp.ReplaceAllFunc</code> to do this)
   739  	</li>
   740  </ul>