This example shows the first supported .gwdk to Go import slice: a page imports
a Go package by its GitHub module path and calls a no-argument build-time
function from build {}.
What works today:
.gwdk page files can declare a top-level aliased import:
import interop "github.com/cssbruno/gowdk/examples/go-interop".
build {} can call one no-argument imported Go function:
=> interop.FeaturedCopyForBuild().
The function must return a JSON object. Scalar fields become string
interpolation data for view {}.
Literal build {} and paths {} records still work in other examples.
What does not work yet:
load {}, act {}, and api {} do not execute user-owned Go handlers from
the generated app yet.
Arbitrary Go statements inside build {} are not supported.
(T, error) build function signatures are not supported yet.
catalog.go is the imported application code. The .gwdk page uses the import
as its main data path, with no literal fallback.
go run ./cmd/gowdk build --out /tmp/gowdk-go-interop examples/go-interop/imported-build.page.gwdk
test -f /tmp/gowdk-go-interop/go-imported/index.html