A commented block is a sequence of lines preceded by a descriptive comment. Commented blocks should be treated as normal blocks and therefore require newlines separating them from other blocks.
Variables are written in `camelCase` and should clearly state what they contain, preferably with no abbreviations. Common short names like `id` and `url` are allowed.
Iterator variables in loops are an exception to this rule and can be 1-letter, non-significant variable names, usually `i` and `j`. `index` is also quite common.
`type` definitions should be placed at the very top of your files. Variables, constants, interface implementation assertions and the `package` statement are the only constructs allowed above `type` definitions.
You should delete outdated code instead of commenting it out. Comments should be used for explanation of existing code and outdated code is saved in the git history anyway if you ever need it (in most cases outdated code is never re-used).
Package names should be short lowercase identifiers and tests should be written using the black box pattern. Black box testing can be enabled by adding the suffix `_test` to the package names in `*_test.go` files. It will enable you to test your library like it would be used by another developer, without internal access to private variables.
## Use gofmt
Your IDE should automatically call `gofmt` to format your code every time you save the file.
## Code editor
It is highly recommended to use [Visual Studio Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/) as it has an excellent Go plugin and the repository includes workspace settings to get you started quickly.