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Responding to requests via simple route matching is built in to Go's net/http standard library package. Just register the path prefixes and callbacks you want invoked and then call the ListenAndServe to have the default request handler invoked on each request. For example:
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A simple Sinatra app to test the OAuth callback functionality in Etsy. To use: 1. Install dependencies
2. Supply a valid api key & secret
3. Run `ruby etsy_verification_app.rb`
4. Point a browser to http://localhost:4567/
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HTML stands for Hypertext Markup Language and is how documents (web pages) are structured so that they appear a certain way in a web browser. When your web browser (Firefox / Chrome / Safari / etc...) receives an HTML document, it renders the markup into the "page" that you see.
Besides the Wikipedia article linked above, here are other resources for learning about HTML:
Introduction to HTML -- This looks like a great starter resource that shows you how basic markup is rendered in the browser. It even has a live preview so that you can try things out and see how they appear.
Introduction to HTML5 -- This comes from the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN) and is more in-depth about the spec and compatibility of each of the tags. A good jumping off point might be this page th
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Example of stripping credentials / sensitive data from GET params when using VCR (5.0.x)
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