Thursday, July 10, 2025
HomeLanguagesGolangHow to Split a String in Golang?

How to Split a String in Golang?

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 Go strings, you are allowed to split a string into a slice with the help of the following functions. These functions are defined under the strings package so, you have to import strings package in your program for accessing these functions:
1. Split: This function splits a string into all substrings separated by the given separator and returns a slice that contains these substrings.
Syntax: 

func Split(str, sep string) []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 contains 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:

Go




// Go program to illustrate how to split a string
package main
 
import (
    "fmt"
    "strings"
)
 
// Main function
func main() {
 
    // Creating and initializing the strings
    str1 := "Welcome, to the, online portal, of GeeksforGeeks"
    str2 := "My dog name is Dollar"
    str3 := "I like to play Ludo"
 
    // Displaying strings
    fmt.Println("String 1: ", str1)
    fmt.Println("String 2: ", str2)
    fmt.Println("String 3: ", str3)
 
    // Splitting the given strings
    // Using Split() function
    res1 := strings.Split(str1, ",")
    res2 := strings.Split(str2, "")
    res3 := strings.Split(str3, "!")
    res4 := strings.Split("", "GeeksforGeeks, geeks")
 
    // Displaying the result
 
    fmt.Println("\nResult 1: ", res1)
    fmt.Println("Result 2: ", res2)
    fmt.Println("Result 3: ", res3)
    fmt.Println("Result 4: ", res4)
 
}


Output:

String 1:  Welcome, to the, online portal, of GeeksforGeeks
String 2:  My dog name is Dollar
String 3:  I like to play Ludo

Result 1:  [Welcome  to the  online portal  of GeeksforGeeks]
Result 2:  [M y   d o g   n a m e   i s   D o l l a r]
Result 3:  [I like to play Ludo]
Result 4:  []

2. SplitAfter: This function splits a string into all substrings after each instance of the given separator and returns a slice that contains these substrings.
Syntax: 

func SplitAfter(str, sep string) []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 contains 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:

Go




// Go program to illustrate how to split a string
package main
 
import (
    "fmt"
    "strings"
)
 
// Main function
func main() {
 
    // Creating and initializing the strings
    str1 := "Welcome, to the, online portal, of GeeksforGeeks"
    str2 := "My dog name is Dollar"
    str3 := "I like to play Ludo"
 
    // Displaying strings
    fmt.Println("String 1: ", str1)
    fmt.Println("String 2: ", str2)
    fmt.Println("String 3: ", str3)
 
    // Splitting the given strings
    // Using SplitAfter() function
    res1 := strings.SplitAfter(str1, ",")
    res2 := strings.SplitAfter(str2, "")
    res3 := strings.SplitAfter(str3, "!")
    res4 := strings.SplitAfter("", "GeeksforGeeks, geeks")
 
    // Displaying the result
    fmt.Println("\nResult 1: ", res1)
    fmt.Println("Result 2: ", res2)
    fmt.Println("Result 3: ", res3)
    fmt.Println("Result 4: ", res4)
 
}


Output:

String 1:  Welcome, to the, online portal, of GeeksforGeeks
String 2:  My dog name is Dollar
String 3:  I like to play Ludo

Result 1:  [Welcome,  to the,  online portal,  of GeeksforGeeks]
Result 2:  [M y   d o g   n a m e   i s   N a w a b]
Result 3:  [I like to play Ludo]
Result 4:  []

3. SplitAfterN: This function splits a string into all substrings after each instance of the given separator and returns a slice that contains these substrings.
Syntax: 

func SplitAfterN(str, sep string, m int) []string

Here, str is the string, sep is the separator, and m is used to find the number of substrings to return. Here, if m>0, then it returns at most m substrings and the last string substring will not split. If m == 0, then it will return nil. If m<0, then it will return all substrings.
Example:

Go




// Go program to illustrate how to split a string
package main
 
import (
    "fmt"
    "strings"
)
 
// Main function
func main() {
 
    // Creating and initializing the strings
    str1 := "Welcome, to the, online portal, of GeeksforGeeks"
    str2 := "My dog name is Dollar"
    str3 := "I like to play Ludo"
 
    // Displaying strings
    fmt.Println("String 1: ", str1)
    fmt.Println("String 2: ", str2)
    fmt.Println("String 3: ", str3)
 
    // Splitting the given strings
    // Using SplitAfterN() function
    res1 := strings.SplitAfterN(str1, ",", 2)
    res2 := strings.SplitAfterN(str2, "", 4)
    res3 := strings.SplitAfterN(str3, "!", 1)
    res4 := strings.SplitAfterN("", "GeeksforGeeks, geeks", 3)
 
    // Displaying the result
    fmt.Println("\nResult 1: ", res1)
    fmt.Println("Result 2: ", res2)
    fmt.Println("Result 3: ", res3)
    fmt.Println("Result 4: ", res4)
 
}


Output:

String 1:  Welcome, to the, online portal, of GeeksforGeeks
String 2:  My dog name is Dollar
String 3:  I like to play Ludo

Result 1:  [Welcome,  to the, online portal, of GeeksforGeeks]
Result 2:  [M y   dog name is Dollar]
Result 3:  [I like to play Ludo]
Result 4:  [] 
RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Dominic
32126 POSTS0 COMMENTS
Milvus
66 POSTS0 COMMENTS
Nango Kala
6510 POSTS0 COMMENTS
Nicole Veronica
11658 POSTS0 COMMENTS
Nokonwaba Nkukhwana
11714 POSTS0 COMMENTS
Shaida Kate Naidoo
6605 POSTS0 COMMENTS
Ted Musemwa
6865 POSTS0 COMMENTS
Thapelo Manthata
6565 POSTS0 COMMENTS
Umr Jansen
6558 POSTS0 COMMENTS