Parsing numbers from strings is a basic but common task in many programs; here’s how to do it in Go. |
|
package main
|
|
The built-in package |
import "strconv"
import "fmt"
|
func main() {
|
|
With |
f, _ := strconv.ParseFloat("1.234", 64)
fmt.Println(f)
|
For |
i, _ := strconv.ParseInt("123", 0, 64)
fmt.Println(i)
|
|
d, _ := strconv.ParseInt("0x1c8", 0, 64)
fmt.Println(d)
|
A |
u, _ := strconv.ParseUint("789", 0, 64)
fmt.Println(u)
|
|
k, _ := strconv.Atoi("135")
fmt.Println(k)
|
Parse functions return an error on bad input. |
_, e := strconv.Atoi("wat")
fmt.Println(e)
}
|
$ go run number-parsing.go
1.234
123
456
789
135
strconv.ParseInt: parsing "wat": invalid syntax
|
|
Next we’ll look at another common parsing task: URLs. |
Next example: URL Parsing.