-2

How found offset index a string in []rune using go?

I can do this work with string type.

if i := strings.Index(input[offset:], "}}"); i > 0 {print(i);}

but i need for runes.

i have a rune and want get offset index.

how can do this work with runes type in go?

example for more undrestand want need:

int offset=0//mean start from 0 (this is important for me)
string text="123456783}}56"
if i := strings.Index(text[offset:], "}}"); i > 0 {print(i);}

output of this example is : 9

but i want do this with []rune type(text variable)

may?

see my current code : https://play.golang.org/p/seImKzVpdh

tank you.

1 Answer 1

4

Edit #2: You again indicated a new type "meaning" of your question: you want to search a string in a []rune.

Answer: this is not supported directly in the standard library. But it's easy to implement it with 2 for loops:

func search(text []rune, what string) int {
    whatRunes := []rune(what)

    for i := range text {
        found := true
        for j := range whatRunes {
            if text[i+j] != whatRunes[j] {
                found = false
                break
            }
        }
        if found {
            return i
        }
    }
    return -1
}

Testing it:

value := []rune("123}456}}789")
result := search(value, "}}")
fmt.Println(result)

Output (try it on the Go Playground):

7

Edit: You updated the question indicating that you want to search runes in a string.

You may easily convert a []rune to a string using a simple type conversion:

toSearchRunes := []rune{'}', '}'}
toSearch := string(toSearchRunes)

And from there on, you can use strings.Index() as you did in your example:

if i := strings.Index(text[offset:], toSearch); i > 0 {
    print(i)
}

Try it on the Go Playground.

Original answer follows:


string values in Go are stored as UTF-8 encoded bytes. strings.Index() returns you the byte position if the given substring is found.

So basically what you want is to convert this byte-position to rune-position. The unicode/utf8 package contains utility functions for telling the rune-count or rune-length of a string: utf8.RuneCountInString().

So basically you just need to pass the substring to this function:

offset := 0
text := "123456789}}56"
if i := strings.Index(text[offset:], "}}"); i > 0 {
    fmt.Println("byte-pos:", i, "rune-pos:", utf8.RuneCountInString(text[offset:i]))
}

text = "世界}}世界"
if i := strings.Index(text[offset:], "}}"); i > 0 {
    fmt.Println("byte-pos:", i, "rune-pos:", utf8.RuneCountInString(text[offset:i]))
}

Output (try it on the Go Playground):

byte-pos: 9 rune-pos: 9
byte-pos: 6 rune-pos: 2

Note: offset must also be a byte position, because when slicing a string like text[offset:], the index is interpreted as byte-index.

If you want to get the index of a rune, use strings.IndexRune() instead of strings.Index().

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.