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Given an input string such as " word1 word2 word3 word4 ", what would be the best approach to split this as an array of strings in Go? Note that there can be any number of spaces or unicode-spacing characters between each word.

In Java I would just use someString.trim().split("\\s+").

(Note: possible duplicate Split string using regular expression in Go doesn't give any good quality answer. Please provide an actual example, not just a link to the regexp or strings packages reference.)

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  • If you ended up on this page. This is what you are looking for: strings.SplitN(s, sep string, n int) []string
    – sny
    Sep 3, 2022 at 9:57

4 Answers 4

398

The strings package has a Fields method.

someString := "one    two   three four "

words := strings.Fields(someString)

fmt.Println(words, len(words)) // [one two three four] 4

DEMO: http://play.golang.org/p/et97S90cIH

From the docs:

Fields splits the string s around each instance of one or more consecutive white space characters, as defined by unicode.IsSpace, returning a slice of substrings of s or an empty slice if s contains only white space.

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  • 5
    Unfortunately, strings.Fields doesn't ignore spaces in quoted parts.
    – chmike
    Dec 21, 2018 at 13:26
  • 8
    @chmike True, but the moment quotes get involved, you're in the business of decoding or parsing some specific encoding or format.
    – mtraceur
    Jan 20, 2020 at 21:45
  • 1
    @chmike you might need shlex for that godoc.org/github.com/google/shlex
    – akhy
    Jul 16, 2020 at 16:39
12

If you're using tip: regexp.Split

func (re *Regexp) Split(s string, n int) []string

Split slices s into substrings separated by the expression and returns a slice of the substrings between those expression matches.

The slice returned by this method consists of all the substrings of s not contained in the slice returned by FindAllString. When called on an expression that contains no metacharacters, it is equivalent to strings.SplitN.

Example:

s := regexp.MustCompile("a*").Split("abaabaccadaaae", 5)
// s: ["", "b", "b", "c", "cadaaae"]

The count determines the number of substrings to return:

n > 0: at most n substrings; the last substring will be the unsplit remainder.
n == 0: the result is nil (zero substrings)
n < 0: all substrings
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  • 5
    this seems like an overkill
    – thwd
    Dec 6, 2012 at 9:14
  • @Tom But it's still interesting even if it's not the best answer here. I upvoted this answer because I learned something. Dec 6, 2012 at 18:24
  • You should note that Fields() won't return empty strings. So the number of fields returned will vary. If you're trying to parse something consistent, then it won't work for you. You might need to use regex if a FieldsFunc() also won't work.
    – Tom
    Nov 5, 2014 at 19:54
7

I came up with the following, but that seems a bit too verbose:

import "regexp"
r := regexp.MustCompile("[^\\s]+")
r.FindAllString("  word1   word2 word3   word4  ", -1)

which will evaluate to:

[]string{"word1", "word2", "word3", "word4"}

Is there a more compact or more idiomatic expression?

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You can use package strings function split strings.Split(someString, " ")

strings.Split

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  • 1
    The community encourages adding explanations to questions and not posting purely code answers (see here). Also, please have a read of this help page about how to format code properly.
    – costaparas
    Dec 26, 2020 at 3:37
  • 2
    That's ok, but won't work for tabs, newlines and other whitespaces
    – user967710
    Dec 6, 2021 at 20:01
  • 1
    Also does not work for multiple spaces in a row, as stated in the question. Dec 5, 2022 at 14:46

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