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The Go blog: strings, bytes, runes, and characters in Go: https://blog.golang.org/strings
The Go blog: strings, bytes, runes, and characters in Go: https://blog.golang.org/strings


A string in Go is a read-only slice of bytes. A string can hold arbitrary bytes, it is not required to hold unicode/UTF-8/other format.
==How Strings Work==


Indexing a string does not access characters - it accesses the individual bytes. So, when you store a character value in a string, you are storing the byte representation at that point in time.  
A string in Go is a read-only slice of bytes. A string can hold arbitrary bytes, it is not required to hold unicode/UTF-8/other format. That means that "characters" are not special types in Go; rather, strings refer to bytes.
 
Indexing a string does not access characters - it accesses the individual bytes. So, when you store a character value in a string, you are storing the byte representation of that character at that point in time.  
 
==Slices==





Revision as of 18:16, 12 December 2018

Related: Rosalind/Problem 1A

The Go blog: strings, bytes, runes, and characters in Go: https://blog.golang.org/strings

How Strings Work

A string in Go is a read-only slice of bytes. A string can hold arbitrary bytes, it is not required to hold unicode/UTF-8/other format. That means that "characters" are not special types in Go; rather, strings refer to bytes.

Indexing a string does not access characters - it accesses the individual bytes. So, when you store a character value in a string, you are storing the byte representation of that character at that point in time.

Slices

Flags