On Friday, January 26, 2018 11:32:42 Mike Parker via Digitalmars-d-learn wrote: > On Friday, 26 January 2018 at 11:18:21 UTC, Oleksii Skidan wrote: > > I could imagine a mixin-based solution in D: > > ```d > > // Usage: > > ASSERT!"a == b"; > > ``` > > But it seems a bit alien to me. First of all, it kind of > > stringly-typed one. Secondly, neither IDEs nor advanced text > > editors are able to figure out that the string contains actual > > D code, and so neither syntax highlighting nor code assistance > > work with this approach. > > Token strings are intended for this and editors *should* > highlight them (don't know if any currently do): > > https://dlang.org/spec/lex.html#token_strings
So that's what they're called. I can never remember (though I rarely use them either, since I actually prefer that strings be highlighted as strings and not code even if they contain code). vim definitely highlights them as code, and I would expect most editors that don't understand them to highlight them as if they were code, since q{} looks like code. If anything, it would take a text editor that understood D quite well to highlight it as a string (though really, no editor should be doing that, since the main point of using token strings is for them to be highlighted as code). - Jonathan M Davis