Golang | Splitting the string after the specified separator
In Go language, strings are different from other languages like Java, C++, Python, etc. It is a sequence of variable-width characters where each and every character is represented by one or more bytes using UTF-8 Encoding.
In the Go strings, you are allowed to split the string after the specified separator using a SplitN() function. This function splits a slice into all substrings after each instance of the given separator and returns a slice of the substrings between those separators. The count indicates the number of subslices to return. It is defined under the string package so, you have to import string package in your program for accessing SplitN function.
Syntax:
func SplitN(str, sep string, m int) []string
Here, str is the string and sep is the separator. If str does not contain the given sep and sep is non-empty, then it will return a slice of length 1 which contain only str. Or if the sep is empty, then it will split after each UTF-8 sequence. Or if both str and sep are empty, then it will return an empty slice.
Example 1:
// Go program to illustrate the concept // of splitting a string package main import ( "fmt" "strings" ) func main() { // Creating and Splitting a string // Using SplitN function res1 := strings.SplitN( "****Welcome, to, w3wiki****" , "," , -1) res2 := strings.SplitN( "Learning x how x to x trim" + " x a x slice of bytes" , "x" , 3) res3 := strings.SplitN( "Beginner,for,Beginner, Geek" , "," , 0) res4 := strings.SplitN( "" , "," , 2) // Display the results fmt.Printf( "\nFinal Result after splitting:\n" ) fmt.Printf( "\nSlice 1: %s" , res1) fmt.Printf( "\nSlice 2: %s" , res2) fmt.Printf( "\nSlice 3: %s" , res3) fmt.Printf( "\nSlice 4: %s" , res4) } |
Output:
Final Result after splitting: Slice 1: [****Welcome to w3wiki****] Slice 2: [Learning how to x trim x a x slice of bytes] Slice 3: [] Slice 4: []
Example 2:
// Go program to illustrate the concept // of splitting the string package main import ( "fmt" "strings" ) func main() { // Creating and initializing a string // Using shorthand declaration string_1 := "Welcome, to, Beginner, for, Beginner" string_2 := "AppleAppleAppleAppleAppleApple" string_3 := "%G%E%E%K%sS" // Displaying strings fmt.Println( "Original Strings:" ) fmt.Printf( "String 1: %s" , string_1) fmt.Printf( "\nString 2: %s" , string_2) fmt.Printf( "\nString 3: %s" , string_3) // Splitting the given strings // Using SplitN function res1 := strings.SplitN(string_1, "," , 2) res2 := strings.SplitN(string_2, "pp" , 3) res3 := strings.SplitN(string_3, "%" , 0) // Display the results fmt.Printf( "\n\nAfter splitting:\n" ) fmt.Printf( "\nString 1: %s" , res1) fmt.Printf( "\nString 2: %s" , res2) fmt.Printf( "\nString 3: %s" , res3) } |
Output:
Original Strings: String 1: Welcome, to, Beginner, for, Beginner String 2: AppleAppleAppleAppleAppleApple String 3: %G%E%E%K%sS After splitting: String 1: [Welcome to, Beginner, for, Beginner] String 2: [A leA leAppleAppleAppleApple] String 3: []
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