I watched Ultimate Go on Safari Books a while ago and recently got back to it to revise my knowledge.
It will fill all the gaps and answer all the questions one can have, especially after the Tour of Go or reading a book which only scratches the surface.
I can't express enough how amazing that course and how useful what Hoanh did.
Once you finish, I'd also suggest to take a look to the Ardan Lab's github account since there are tons of material for Go.
Bill's presentation also made me giggle a lot -which is a rare thing for tutorials- since he says things like
If I see an interface and it doesn't smell right,
and I'll be asking the developer, why are you
using an interface here? Now if the developer
gives me any one of these two answers, we're
gonna go take a walk.
as if this is a movie and he's going to take the developer to the woods to execute because the developer done wrong Bill :)
It will fill all the gaps and answer all the questions one can have, especially after the Tour of Go or reading a book which only scratches the surface.
I can't express enough how amazing that course and how useful what Hoanh did.
Once you finish, I'd also suggest to take a look to the Ardan Lab's github account since there are tons of material for Go.
Bill's presentation also made me giggle a lot -which is a rare thing for tutorials- since he says things like
as if this is a movie and he's going to take the developer to the woods to execute because the developer done wrong Bill :)