On 26 Apr 2016, at 08:04, Chris Lattner via swift-evolution 
<[email protected]> wrote:
> B) Introduce a modifier character that requires a more complex closing 
> sequence to close off the string, see C++ raw string literals for prior art 
> on this approach.  Perhaps something like:
> 
>        Rxxx”look “ here “ I can use quotes “xxx

Can you clarify how this is different from heredoc? Because really, whether I 
write <<DELIMITER
stuff
DELIMITER

or RDELIMITER" stuff "DELIMITER

doesn't seem to make much of a difference.

FWIW, what I did in Hammer (my HyperCard clone's programming language) was to 
simply support several different international quotes. So you had standard inch 
signs:

"foo"

which were extended to support line breaks. I also offered:

“foo”
«foo»

All these do is behave essentially like the inch signs, but require you to 
quote a different character. So if you're Swiss or French, you'd stick with 
inch signs. If you're English and not that good at typography, you'd use 
guillemets. If you're writing French HTML, you'd go with the typographic 
quotes. It solves pasting in longer text as long as it doesn't contain too many 
different characters, you can use several different ones on one line, the 
optimizer doesn't car which you use and will merge the actual text data of 
consecutive strings.

Since most larger documents are better included as separate resource files 
instead of pasted into the code, this covers common uses of multiline or 
regexes. Since such text won't be very long it's also not as bad to ignore 
indentation (and if you don't like the look, that's something that can be fixed 
by the editor applying an indent).

Cheers,
-- Uli Kusterer
"The Witnesses of TeachText are everywhere..."
http://stacksmith.org
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