Go Strings: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 67: | Line 67: | ||
<blockquote style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border: solid thin lightgrey;"> | <blockquote style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border: solid thin lightgrey;"> | ||
:[[Go Integers# | :[[Go Integers#Conversion_between_bytes_and_strings|Conversion between bytes and strings]] | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Revision as of 06:18, 31 March 2016
External
- String types in the language specification https://golang.org/ref/spec#String_types
- String literals in the language specification https://golang.org/ref/spec#String_literals
Internal
Overview
The pre-declared String type identifier is string. String values are (possibly empty) sequences of bytes. String values are immutable.
String Literals
A string literal is a string constant obtained from concatenating a sequence of characters.
Raw String Literals
Raw string literals are sequences of characters enclosed by backquotes (backticks) `. Any other character is taken literally, back slashes have no special meaning and new lines can appear. Carriage return characters inside raw string literals are discarded. The following code:
var sl = `Example \n \t ... "something"` fmt.Println(sl);
will produce:
Example \n \t ... "something"
Interpreted String Literals
Interpreted string literals are character sequences between double quotes, as in "example".
Interpreted strings allow escaping (\n or \t).
String Operators and Functions
Indexing Operator
Indexing operator [] returns a byte (uint8)
Strings are indexed starting with 0. If the index is out of bounds, the runtime generates a run-time panic:
panic: runtime error: index out of range
Concatenation Operator
Concatenation operator + concatenates two strings together.
"a" + "b"
String Length
Conversion of a byte to string
Reading with a string with a Reader
TODO
strings.NewReader()
See Go_Package_strings#NewReader.28.29