In Golang string is a sequence of bytes. A string literal actually represents a UTF-8 sequence of bytes. In UTF-8, ASCII characters are single-byte corresponding to the first 128 Unicode characters. All other characters are between 1 -4 bytes. Due to this, it is not possible to index a character in a string. In GO, rune data type represents a Unicode point. Once a string is converted to an array of rune then it is possible to index a character in that array of rune. You can learn more about rune here – https://golangbyexample.com/understanding-rune-in-golang
For this reason in the below program for swapping characters in a string, we are first converting a string into a rune array so that we can index the rune array to get the individual characters.
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
sample := "ab£d"
r := []rune(sample)
fmt.Printf("Before %s\n", string(r))
r[2], r[3] = r[3], r[2]
fmt.Printf("After %s\n", string(r))
}
Output:
Before: ab£d
After: abd£