EDIT:
Since 1.10, strings.Builder exists. Example:
buf := new(strings.Builder)
n, err := io.Copy(buf, r)
// check errors
fmt.Println(buf.String())
OUTDATED INFORMATION BELOW
The short answer is that it it will not be efficient because converting to a string requires doing a complete copy of the byte array. Here is the proper (non-efficient) way to do what you want:
buf := new(bytes.Buffer)
buf.ReadFrom(yourReader)
s := buf.String() // Does a complete copy of the bytes in the buffer.
This copy is done as a protection mechanism. Strings are immutable. If you could convert a []byte to a string, you could change the contents of the string. However, go allows you to disable the type safety mechanisms using the unsafe package. Use the unsafe package at your own risk. Hopefully the name alone is a good enough warning. Here is how I would do it using unsafe:
buf := new(bytes.Buffer)
buf.ReadFrom(yourReader)
b := buf.Bytes()
s := *(*string)(unsafe.Pointer(&b))
There we go, you have now efficiently converted your byte array to a string. Really, all this does is trick the type system into calling it a string. There are a couple caveats to this method:
My advice is to stick to the official method. Doing a copy is not that expensive and it is not worth the evils of unsafe. If the string is too large to do a copy, you should not be making it into a string.
Answers so far haven't addressed the "entire stream" part of the question. I think the good way to do this is ioutil.ReadAll
. With your io.ReaderCloser
named rc
, I would write,
Go >= v1.16
if b, err := io.ReadAll(rc); err == nil {
return string(b)
} ...
Go <= v1.15
if b, err := ioutil.ReadAll(rc); err == nil {
return string(b)
} ...
data, _ := ioutil.ReadAll(response.Body)
fmt.Println(string(data))
The most efficient way would be to always use []byte
instead of string
.
In case you need to print data received from the io.ReadCloser
, the fmt
package can handle []byte
, but it isn't efficient because the fmt
implementation will internally convert []byte
to string
. In order to avoid this conversion, you can implement the fmt.Formatter
interface for a type like type ByteSlice []byte
.
func copyToString(r io.Reader) (res string, err error) {
var sb strings.Builder
if _, err = io.Copy(&sb, r); err == nil {
res = sb.String()
}
return
}
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