From 5498fa90e9921193be11c6e6a9e017a53c0e1588 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rob Pike Date: Thu, 22 Aug 2019 15:50:06 +1000 Subject: [PATCH] strconv: simplify the text for bases in ParseInt Followon from a review comment in https://golang.org/cl/191078 Change-Id: If115b2ae0df5e5cb9babd60802947ddb687d56c2 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/191219 Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor --- src/strconv/atoi.go | 9 ++++----- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/strconv/atoi.go b/src/strconv/atoi.go index 0233f14b40..e811bc4df1 100644 --- a/src/strconv/atoi.go +++ b/src/strconv/atoi.go @@ -152,11 +152,10 @@ func ParseUint(s string, base int, bitSize int) (uint64, error) { // 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 base == 0, the base is implied by the string's prefix: -// base 2 for "0b", base 8 for "0" or "0o", base 16 for "0x", -// and base 10 otherwise. Also, for base == 0 only, underscore -// characters are permitted per the Go integer literal syntax. -// If base is below 0, is 1, or is above 36, an error is returned. +// 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 -- 2.50.0