stringgofloating-pointtypecast-operator

Convert float to string in Go lang as per the required format


I have 4 float values(startLat, startLon, endLat, endLon) in Go. I want to append (replace) these values to the below string:

var etaString = []byte(`{"start_latitude":"` + startLat + `","start_longitude":"` + startLon + `","end_latitude":"` + endLat + `","end_longitude":"` + endLon }`)

I have to typecast them to string before doing so:

startLat := strconv.FormatFloat(o.Coordinate.Longitude, 'g', 1, 64)

However, when I do so, I get the values of these parameters as:

"4e+01 -1e+02 4e+01 -1e+02"

But I just want something like this: "64.2345".

How can I achieve this?


Solution

  • Package strconv

    import "strconv" > func FormatFloat

    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.

    Use a precision of -1, not 1. Use a format of f, not g to avoid exponent form for large exponents (see HectorJ's comment).

    startLat := strconv.FormatFloat(o.Coordinate.Longitude, 'f', -1, 64)

    For example,

    package main
    
    import (
        "fmt"
        "strconv"
    )
    
    func main() {
        f := 64.2345
        s := strconv.FormatFloat(f, 'g', 1, 64)
        fmt.Println(s)
        s = strconv.FormatFloat(f, 'f', -1, 64)
        fmt.Println(s)
    }
    

    Output:

    6e+01
    64.2345