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Home/ Questions/Q 6780035
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T16:27:30+00:00 2026-05-26T16:27:30+00:00

I’m trying to implement an Observer Pattern suggested here; Observer pattern in Go language

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I’m trying to implement an Observer Pattern suggested here; Observer pattern in Go language

(the code listed above doesn’t compile and is incomplete). Here, is a complete code that compiles but I get deadlock error.

package main

import (
    "fmt"
)

type Publisher struct{
    listeners []chan int
}

type Subscriber struct{
    Channel chan int
    Name string
}

func (p *Publisher) Sub(c chan int){
    p.listeners = append(p.listeners, c)
}

func (p *Publisher) Pub(m int, quit chan int){
    for _, c := range p.listeners{
        c <- m
    }
    quit <- 0
}

func (s *Subscriber) ListenOnChannel(){
    data := <-s.Channel
    fmt.Printf("Name: %v; Data: %v\n", s.Name, data)            
}

func main() {
    quit := make(chan int)
    p := &Publisher{}
    subscribers := []*Subscriber{&Subscriber{Channel: make(chan int), Name: "1"}, &Subscriber{Channel: make(chan int), Name: "2"}, &Subscriber{Channel: make(chan int), Name: "3"}}
    for _, v := range subscribers{
        p.Sub(v.Channel)
        go v.ListenOnChannel() 
    }

    p.Pub(2, quit)

    <-quit              
}

Also, if I get rid of ‘quit’ completely, I get no error but it only prints first record.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T16:27:30+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 4:27 pm

    The problem is that you’re sending to quit on the same goroutine that’s receiving from quit.

    quit has a buffer size of 0, which means that in order to proceed there has to be a sender on one side and a receiver on the other at the same time. You’re sending, but no one’s on the other end, so you wait forever. In this particular case the Go runtime is able to detect the problem and panic.

    The reason only the first value is printed when you remove quit is that your main goroutine is exiting before your remaining two are able to print.

    Do not just increase channel buffer sizes to get rid of problems like this. It can help (although in this case it doesn’t), but it only covers up the problem and doesn’t truly fix the underlying cause. Increasing a channel’s buffer size is strictly an optimization. In fact, it’s usually better to develop with no buffer because it makes concurrency problems more obvious.

    There are two ways to fix the problem:

    • Keep quit, but send 0 on it in each goroutine inside ListenOnChannel. In main, make sure you receive a value from each goroutine before moving on. (In this case, you’ll wait for three values.)
    • Use a WaitGroup. There’s a good example of how it works in the documentation.
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