// Copyright 2020 The CUE Authors // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. // Copyright 2018 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // Originally generated with: go run qgo.go -exclude=Append,Unquote,Itoa,CanBackquote,FormatComplex extract strconv package strconv import ( "math/big" "strconv" ) // 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. func ParseBool(str string) (bool, error) { return strconv.ParseBool(str) } // FormatBool returns "true" or "false" according to the value of b. func FormatBool(b bool) string { return strconv.FormatBool(b) } // ParseComplex converts the string s to a complex number // with the precision specified by bitSize: 64 for complex64, or 128 for complex128. // When bitSize=64, the result still has type complex128, but it will be // convertible to complex64 without changing its value. // // The number represented by s must be of the form N, Ni, or N±Ni, where N stands // for a floating-point number as recognized by ParseFloat, and i is the imaginary // component. If the second N is unsigned, a + sign is required between the two components // as indicated by the ±. If the second N is NaN, only a + sign is accepted. // The form may be parenthesized and cannot contain any spaces. // The resulting complex number consists of the two components converted by ParseFloat. // // The errors that ParseComplex returns have concrete type *NumError // and include err.Num = s. // // If s is not syntactically well-formed, ParseComplex returns err.Err = ErrSyntax. // // If s is syntactically well-formed but either component is more than 1/2 ULP // away from the largest floating point number of the given component's size, // ParseComplex returns err.Err = ErrRange and c = ±Inf for the respective component. func ParseComplex(s string, bitSize int) (complex128, error) { return strconv.ParseComplex(s, bitSize) } // 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. // // ParseFloat accepts decimal and hexadecimal floating-point number syntax. // If s is well-formed and near a valid floating-point number, // ParseFloat returns the nearest floating-point number rounded // using IEEE754 unbiased rounding. // (Parsing a hexadecimal floating-point value only rounds when // there are more bits in the hexadecimal representation than // will fit in the mantissa.) // // 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. // // ParseFloat recognizes the strings "NaN", and the (possibly signed) strings "Inf" and "Infinity" // as their respective special floating point values. It ignores case when matching. func ParseFloat(s string, bitSize int) (float64, error) { return strconv.ParseFloat(s, bitSize) } // IntSize is the size in bits of an int or uint value. const IntSize = 64 // ParseUint is like ParseInt but for unsigned numbers. func ParseUint(s string, base int, bitSize int) (uint64, error) { return strconv.ParseUint(s, base, bitSize) } // 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 the base argument is 0, the true base is implied by the string's // prefix: 2 for "0b", 8 for "0" or "0o", 16 for "0x", and 10 otherwise. // Also, for argument base 0 only, underscore characters are permitted // as defined by the Go syntax for integer literals. // // 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. // If bitSize is 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. func ParseInt(s string, base int, bitSize int) (i int64, err error) { return strconv.ParseInt(s, base, bitSize) } // Atoi is equivalent to ParseInt(s, 10, 0), converted to type int. func Atoi(s string) (int, error) { return strconv.Atoi(s) } // 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), // 'G' ('E' for large exponents, 'f' otherwise), // 'x' (-0xd.ddddp±ddd, a hexadecimal fraction and binary exponent), or // 'X' (-0Xd.ddddP±ddd, a hexadecimal fraction and binary exponent). // // The precision prec controls the number of digits (excluding the exponent) // printed by the 'e', 'E', 'f', 'g', 'G', 'x', and 'X' formats. // For 'e', 'E', 'f', 'x', and 'X', it is the number of digits after the decimal point. // For 'g' and 'G' it is the maximum number of significant digits (trailing // zeros are removed). // The special precision -1 uses the smallest number of digits // necessary such that ParseFloat will return f exactly. func FormatFloat(f float64, fmt byte, prec, bitSize int) string { return strconv.FormatFloat(f, fmt, prec, bitSize) } // FormatUint returns the string representation of i in the given base, // for 2 <= base <= 62. The result uses: // For 10 <= digit values <= 35, the lower-case letters 'a' to 'z' // For 36 <= digit values <= 61, the upper-case letters 'A' to 'Z' func FormatUint(i *big.Int, base int) string { return i.Text(base) } // FormatInt returns the string representation of i in the given base, // for 2 <= base <= 62. The result uses: // For 10 <= digit values <= 35, the lower-case letters 'a' to 'z' // For 36 <= digit values <= 61, the upper-case letters 'A' to 'Z' func FormatInt(i *big.Int, base int) string { return i.Text(base) } // 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. func Quote(s string) string { return strconv.Quote(s) } // 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. func QuoteToASCII(s string) string { return strconv.QuoteToASCII(s) } // QuoteToGraphic returns a double-quoted Go string literal representing s. // The returned string leaves Unicode graphic characters, as defined by // IsGraphic, unchanged and uses Go escape sequences (\t, \n, \xFF, \u0100) // for non-graphic characters. func QuoteToGraphic(s string) string { return strconv.QuoteToGraphic(s) } // 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. func QuoteRune(r rune) string { return strconv.QuoteRune(r) } // 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. func QuoteRuneToASCII(r rune) string { return strconv.QuoteRuneToASCII(r) } // QuoteRuneToGraphic returns a single-quoted Go character literal representing // the rune. If the rune is not a Unicode graphic character, // as defined by IsGraphic, the returned string will use a Go escape sequence // (\t, \n, \xFF, \u0100). func QuoteRuneToGraphic(r rune) string { return strconv.QuoteRuneToGraphic(r) } // 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. func IsPrint(r rune) bool { return strconv.IsPrint(r) } // 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 IsGraphic(r rune) bool { return strconv.IsGraphic(r) }