IntSize is the size in bits of an int or uint value.
const IntSize = intSize
ErrRange indicates that a value is out of range for the target type.
var ErrRange = errors.New("value out of range")
ErrSyntax indicates that a value does not have the right syntax for the target type.
var ErrSyntax = errors.New("invalid syntax")
func AppendBool(dst []byte, b bool) []byte
AppendBool appends "true" or "false", according to the value of b, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
▹ Example
func AppendFloat(dst []byte, f float64, fmt byte, prec, bitSize int) []byte
AppendFloat appends the string form of the floating-point number f, as generated by FormatFloat, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
▹ Example
func AppendInt(dst []byte, i int64, base int) []byte
AppendInt appends the string form of the integer i, as generated by FormatInt, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
▹ Example
func AppendQuote(dst []byte, s string) []byte
AppendQuote appends a double-quoted Go string literal representing s, as generated by Quote, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
▹ Example
func AppendQuoteRune(dst []byte, r rune) []byte
AppendQuoteRune appends a single-quoted Go character literal representing the rune, as generated by QuoteRune, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
▹ Example
func AppendQuoteRuneToASCII(dst []byte, r rune) []byte
AppendQuoteRuneToASCII appends a single-quoted Go character literal representing the rune, as generated by QuoteRuneToASCII, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
▹ Example
func AppendQuoteRuneToGraphic(dst []byte, r rune) []byte
AppendQuoteRuneToGraphic appends a single-quoted Go character literal representing the rune, as generated by QuoteRuneToGraphic, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
func AppendQuoteToASCII(dst []byte, s string) []byte
AppendQuoteToASCII appends a double-quoted Go string literal representing s, as generated by QuoteToASCII, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
▹ Example
func AppendQuoteToGraphic(dst []byte, s string) []byte
AppendQuoteToGraphic appends a double-quoted Go string literal representing s, as generated by QuoteToGraphic, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
func AppendUint(dst []byte, i uint64, base int) []byte
AppendUint appends the string form of the unsigned integer i, as generated by FormatUint, to dst and returns the extended buffer.
▹ Example
func Atoi(s string) (int, error)
Atoi returns the result of ParseInt(s, 10, 0) converted to type int.
▹ Example
func CanBackquote(s string) bool
CanBackquote reports whether the string s can be represented unchanged as a single-line backquoted string without control characters other than tab.
▹ Example
func FormatBool(b bool) string
FormatBool returns "true" or "false" according to the value of b
▹ Example
func FormatFloat(f float64, fmt byte, prec, bitSize int) string
FormatFloat converts the floating-point number f to a string, according to the format fmt and precision prec. It rounds the result assuming that the original was obtained from a floating-point value of bitSize bits (32 for float32, 64 for float64).
The format fmt is one of 'b' (-ddddp±ddd, a binary exponent), 'e' (-d.dddde±dd, a decimal exponent), 'E' (-d.ddddE±dd, a decimal exponent), 'f' (-ddd.dddd, no exponent), 'g' ('e' for large exponents, 'f' otherwise), or 'G' ('E' for large exponents, 'f' otherwise).
The precision prec controls the number of digits (excluding the exponent) printed by the 'e', 'E', 'f', 'g', and 'G' formats. For 'e', 'E', and 'f' it is the number of digits after the decimal point. For 'g' and 'G' it is the total number of digits. The special precision -1 uses the smallest number of digits necessary such that ParseFloat will return f exactly.
▹ Example
func FormatInt(i int64, base int) string
FormatInt returns the string representation of i in the given base, for 2 <= base <= 36. The result uses the lower-case letters 'a' to 'z' for digit values >= 10.
▹ Example
func FormatUint(i uint64, base int) string
FormatUint returns the string representation of i in the given base, for 2 <= base <= 36. The result uses the lower-case letters 'a' to 'z' for digit values >= 10.
▹ Example
func IsGraphic(r rune) bool
IsGraphic reports whether the rune is defined as a Graphic by Unicode. Such characters include letters, marks, numbers, punctuation, symbols, and spaces, from categories L, M, N, P, S, and Zs.
func IsPrint(r rune) bool
IsPrint reports whether the rune is defined as printable by Go, with the same definition as unicode.IsPrint: letters, numbers, punctuation, symbols and ASCII space.
▹ Example
func Itoa(i int) string
Itoa is shorthand for FormatInt(int64(i), 10).
▹ Example
func ParseBool(str string) (bool, error)
ParseBool returns the boolean value represented by the string. It accepts 1, t, T, TRUE, true, True, 0, f, F, FALSE, false, False. Any other value returns an error.
▹ Example
func ParseFloat(s string, bitSize int) (float64, error)
ParseFloat converts the string s to a floating-point number with the precision specified by bitSize: 32 for float32, or 64 for float64. When bitSize=32, the result still has type float64, but it will be convertible to float32 without changing its value.
If s is well-formed and near a valid floating point number, ParseFloat returns the nearest floating point number rounded using IEEE754 unbiased rounding.
The errors that ParseFloat returns have concrete type *NumError and include err.Num = s.
If s is not syntactically well-formed, ParseFloat returns err.Err = ErrSyntax.
If s is syntactically well-formed but is more than 1/2 ULP away from the largest floating point number of the given size, ParseFloat returns f = ±Inf, err.Err = ErrRange.
▹ Example
func ParseInt(s string, base int, bitSize int) (i int64, err error)
ParseInt interprets a string s in the given base (0, 2 to 36) and bit size (0 to 64) and returns the corresponding value i.
If base == 0, the base is implied by the string's prefix: base 16 for "0x", base 8 for "0", and base 10 otherwise. For bases 1, below 0 or above 36 an error is returned.
The bitSize argument specifies the integer type that the result must fit into. Bit sizes 0, 8, 16, 32, and 64 correspond to int, int8, int16, int32, and int64. For a bitSize below 0 or above 64 an error is returned.
The errors that ParseInt returns have concrete type *NumError and include err.Num = s. If s is empty or contains invalid digits, err.Err = ErrSyntax and the returned value is 0; if the value corresponding to s cannot be represented by a signed integer of the given size, err.Err = ErrRange and the returned value is the maximum magnitude integer of the appropriate bitSize and sign.
▹ Example
func ParseUint(s string, base int, bitSize int) (uint64, error)
ParseUint is like ParseInt but for unsigned numbers.
▹ Example
func Quote(s string) string
Quote returns a double-quoted Go string literal representing s. The returned string uses Go escape sequences (\t, \n, \xFF, \u0100) for control characters and non-printable characters as defined by IsPrint.
▹ Example
func QuoteRune(r rune) string
QuoteRune returns a single-quoted Go character literal representing the rune. The returned string uses Go escape sequences (\t, \n, \xFF, \u0100) for control characters and non-printable characters as defined by IsPrint.
▹ Example
func QuoteRuneToASCII(r rune) string
QuoteRuneToASCII returns a single-quoted Go character literal representing the rune. The returned string uses Go escape sequences (\t, \n, \xFF, \u0100) for non-ASCII characters and non-printable characters as defined by IsPrint.
▹ Example
func QuoteRuneToGraphic(r rune) string
QuoteRuneToGraphic returns a single-quoted Go character literal representing the rune. The returned string uses Go escape sequences (\t, \n, \xFF, \u0100) for non-ASCII characters and non-printable characters as defined by IsGraphic.
func QuoteToASCII(s string) string
QuoteToASCII returns a double-quoted Go string literal representing s. The returned string uses Go escape sequences (\t, \n, \xFF, \u0100) for non-ASCII characters and non-printable characters as defined by IsPrint.
▹ Example
func QuoteToGraphic(s string) string
QuoteToGraphic returns a double-quoted Go string literal representing s. The returned string uses Go escape sequences (\t, \n, \xFF, \u0100) for non-ASCII characters and non-printable characters as defined by IsGraphic.
func Unquote(s string) (string, error)
Unquote interprets s as a single-quoted, double-quoted, or backquoted Go string literal, returning the string value that s quotes. (If s is single-quoted, it would be a Go character literal; Unquote returns the corresponding one-character string.)
▹ Example
func UnquoteChar(s string, quote byte) (value rune, multibyte bool, tail string, err error)
UnquoteChar decodes the first character or byte in the escaped string or character literal represented by the string s. It returns four values:
1) value, the decoded Unicode code point or byte value; 2) multibyte, a boolean indicating whether the decoded character requires a multibyte UTF-8 representation; 3) tail, the remainder of the string after the character; and 4) an error that will be nil if the character is syntactically valid.
The second argument, quote, specifies the type of literal being parsed and therefore which escaped quote character is permitted. If set to a single quote, it permits the sequence \' and disallows unescaped '. If set to a double quote, it permits \" and disallows unescaped ". If set to zero, it does not permit either escape and allows both quote characters to appear unescaped.
▹ Example
A NumError records a failed conversion.
type NumError struct { Func string // the failing function (ParseBool, ParseInt, ParseUint, ParseFloat) Num string // the input Err error // the reason the conversion failed (e.g. ErrRange, ErrSyntax, etc.) }
▹ Example
func (e *NumError) Error() string