Can Golang multiply strings like Python can?

PythonStringPython 3.xGo

Python Problem Overview


Python can multiply strings like so:

Python 3.4.3 (default, Mar 26 2015, 22:03:40)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> x = 'my new text is this long'
>>> y = '#' * len(x)
>>> y
'########################'
>>>

Can Golang do the equivalent somehow?

Python Solutions


Solution 1 - Python

It has a function instead of an operator, strings.Repeat. Here's a port of your Python example, which you can run here:

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"strings"
	"unicode/utf8"
)

func main() {
	x := "my new text is this long"
	y := strings.Repeat("#", utf8.RuneCountInString(x))
    fmt.Println(x)
	fmt.Println(y)
}

Note that I've used utf8.RuneCountInString(x) instead of len(x); the former counts "runes" (Unicode code points), while the latter counts bytes. In the case of "my new text is this long", the difference doesn't matter since all the characters are only one byte, but it's good to get into the habit of specifying what you mean:

len("ā") //=> 2
utf8.RuneCountInString("ā") //=> 1

Since this was a Python comparison question, note that in Python, the one function len counts different things depending on what you call it on. In Python 2, it counted bytes on plain strings and runes on Unicode strings (u'...'):

Python 2.7.18 (default, Aug 15 2020, 17:03:20)
>>> len('ā') #=> 2
>>> len(u'ā') #=> 1

Whereas in modern Python, plain strings are Unicode strings:

Python 3.9.6 (default, Jun 29 2021, 19:36:19) 
>>> len('ā') #=> 1

If you want to count bytes, you need to encode the string into a bytearray first:

>>> len('ā'.encode('UTF-8')) #=> 2

So Python has multiple types of string and one function to get their lengths; Go has only one kind of string, but you have to pick the length function that matches the semantics you want.

Solution 2 - Python

Yes, it can, although not with an operator but with a function in the standard library.

It would be very easy with a simple loop, but the standard library provides you a highly optimized version of it: strings.Repeat().

Your example:

x := "my new text is this long"
y := strings.Repeat("#", len(x))
fmt.Println(y)

Try it on the Go Playground.

Notes: len(x) is the "bytes" length (number of bytes) of the string (in UTF-8 encoding, this is how Go stores strings in memory). If you want the number of characters (runes), use utf8.RuneCountInString().

Solution 3 - Python

Yup. The strings package has a Repeat function.

Solution 4 - Python

you can use the string package. it has a repeat functionhere

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionDuke DougalView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PythonMark ReedView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PythoniczaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PythonShadowRangerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - PythonFriska S E PutriView Answer on Stackoverflow