# README
Formatting strings review
A convenient way to format strings in Go is by using the standard library's fmt.Sprintf() function. It's a string interpolation function, similar to JavaScript's built-in template literals. The %v
substring uses the type's default formatting, which is often what you want.
Default values
const name = "Kim"
const age = 22
s := fmt.Sprintf("%v is %v years old.", name, age)
// s = "Kim is 22 years old."
The equivalent JavaScript code:
const name = 'Kim'
const age = 22
s = `${name} is ${age} years old.`
// s = "Kim is 22 years old."
Rounding floats
fmt.Printf("I am %f years old", 10.523)
// I am 10.523000 years old
// The ".2" rounds the number to 2 decimal places
fmt.Printf("I am %.2f years old", 10.523)
// I am 10.53 years old
Assignment
We need better error logs for our backend developers to help them debug their code.
Complete the getSMSErrorString()
function. It should return a string with this format:
SMS that costs $COST to be sent to 'RECIPIENT' can not be sent
COST
is the cost of the SMS, always showing the price formatted to 2 decimal places.RECIPIENT
is the stringified representation of the recipient's phone number
Be sure to include the $ symbol and the single quotes