How to get an "E" output rather than 69?
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Print("HELLO"[1])
}
Does Golang have function to convert a char to byte and vice versa?
Interpreted string literals are character sequences between double quotes "" using the (possibly multi-byte) UTF-8 encoding of individual characters. In UTF-8, ASCII characters are single-byte corresponding to the first 128 Unicode characters. Strings behave like slices of bytes. A rune is an integer value identifying a Unicode code point. Therefore,
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println(string("Hello"[1])) // ASCII only
fmt.Println(string([]rune("Hello, 世界")[1])) // UTF-8
fmt.Println(string([]rune("Hello, 世界")[8])) // UTF-8
}
Output:
e
e
界
Read:
Go Programming Language Specification section on Conversions.
How about this?
fmt.Printf("%c","HELLO"[1])
As Peter points out, to allow for more than just ASCII:
fmt.Printf("%c", []rune("HELLO")[1])
1000000*4 = 4000000 bytes of memory
. utf-8 uses 1 byte for ascii characters. but the rune uses 4 bytes for each character. This means a huge memory savings. I'm guessing this requires in bit coding, but it's worth it for large text.
Commented
Jan 14, 2022 at 13:01
You can also try typecasting it with string.
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println(string("Hello"[1]))
}
Can be done via slicing too
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Print("HELLO"[1:2])
}
NOTE: This solution only works for ASCII characters.
"हैलो"[:1]
it gives you �
Go doesn't really have a character type as such. byte is often used for ASCII characters, and rune is used for Unicode characters, but they are both just aliases for integer types (uint8 and int32). So if you want to force them to be printed as characters instead of numbers, you need to use Printf("%c", x)
. The %c
format specification works for any integer type.
The general solution to interpreting a char as a string is string("HELLO"[1])
.
Rich's solution also works, of course.
Try this to get the charecters by their index
package main
import (
"fmt"
"strings"
)
func main() {
str := strings.Split("HELLO","")
fmt.Print(str[1])
}
String characters are runes, so to print them, you have to turn them back into String.
fmt.Print(string("HELLO"[1]))
The right answer depends on the context.
The simplest solution is to convert the string to a rune slice. A rune is a single UTF-8 character. Keep in mind that this conversion is costly for your CPU as well as memory-wise.
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
str := "Hello, 世界"
runeSlice := []rune(str)
fmt.Printf("'%c'\n", runeSlice[8])
}
This could be a good solution if you frequently need to get the ith character of the same string, over and over again. In this case you'd make the conversion once, and use the same rune slice multiple times.
Normal strings are arrays of bytes. When you convert it to a rune slice, in the worst case it will take up 4 times as much memory, because a single rune is 4 bytes. This conversion also takes time. So using this solution to create a general utility function that returns the ith character of a string would be absolutely terrible. The code below works but is not a good idea.
package main
import (
"fmt"
)
func RuneAt(s string, i int) (rune, bool) {
runeSlice := []rune(s)
if i >= len(runeSlice) || i < 0 {
return 0, false
}
return runeSlice[i], true
}
func main() {
str := "Hello, 世界"
char, ok := RuneAt(str, 8)
fmt.Printf("char: '%c', ok: %#v\n", char, ok)
}
A better solution in this case would be to use a for loop and utf8.DecodeRuneInString
to iterate over the existing string to find the ith unicode character. This would not waste memory and your CPU's time to create a 4 times larger copy of the entire string. You only iterate up to the index you specified and you don't allocate any memory.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"unicode/utf8"
)
// Get the ith rune in s
func RuneAt(s string, i int) (rune, bool) {
if i < 0 {
// the index cannot be negative
return 0, false
}
leftStr := s
var j int
for {
result, size := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(leftStr)
if size == 0 {
// we've reached the end of the string
return 0, false
}
if j == i {
// we've found the character!
return result, true
}
leftStr = leftStr[size:]
j++
}
}
func main() {
str := "Hello, 世界"
char, ok := RuneAt(str, 8)
fmt.Printf("char: '%c', ok: %#v\n", char, ok)
}
package main
import "main"
func main(){
str := "hello"
fmt.Printf("%d\n", []byte(str))
for i := 0; i < len(str); i++ {
fmt.Printf("%v %[1]T\n", str[i])
}
}
Another Solution to isolate a character in a string
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
var word string = "ZbjTS"
// P R I N T
fmt.Println(word)
yo := string([]rune(word)[0])
fmt.Println(yo)
//I N D E X
x :=0
for x < len(word){
yo := string([]rune(word)[x])
fmt.Println(yo)
x+=1
}
}
for string arrays also:
fmt.Println(string([]rune(sArray[0])[0]))
// = commented line
len("cafés")
> len([]rune("cafés"))
and may reconvert the string on each iteration for, O(n²). Just do for _, r := range word { fmt.Printf("%c", r) }
. If you really wanted to loop with an index for x := 0; x < limit; x++
. Please learn the basics of a language before answering questions.
The solution will be :
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
str := "HELLO"
string(str[0])//H
string(str[1])//E
string(str[2])//L
string(str[3])//L
string(str[4])//O
}