For the above: inspiration; Go source; flash version. Want 8 gophers? JS; flash. ...or rewritten for GopherJS? The Go gopher was designed by Renee French. The design is licensed under the Creative Commons 3.0 Attributions license. For more details: http://blog.golang.org/gopher

TARDIS Go transpiler (development paused)

The objective of the project is to save time and energy by enabling the same client-side Go code to be deployed on a very wide range of platforms.

TARDIS Go does this by transpiling Go->Haxe. The Haxe compiler then generates equivalent code for JavaScript, ActionScript/Flash, C++, C# and Java. By linking to cross-platform Haxe libraries like OpenFL, client-side Go code can run almost anywhere.

The project works, with 90 go1.4 standard packages passing their tests, although it is not yet production-ready.

PLEASE NOTE: The advent of Go 1.5, with support for both iOS and Android, together with GopherJS, mean that Go is now well on the way to being able to create a cross-platform UI. Elliott has therefore paused development.

Micro FAQ:

The project was featured on the official Go blog - Go talks at FOSDEM 2014.

Bradfitz said kind words about the project on Reddit, mentioned it at GoCon 2014 in Tokyo and again at dotGo in Paris 2014.