While I long for multiline string literals, I'd also very like to see a
different syntax as in many cases, these can be XML/HTML snippets and the use
of quotes is ubiqituous. I'd very much like to see a variant where you can
simply paste almost any string without escaping it.
For example, Scala uses a tripple-quote syntax... As we've gotten rid of ' for
character literals, we could use it for multiline strings?
Or possibly tripple-apostrophe for multiline strings?
let xml = '''
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<catalog/>
'''
> On Apr 3, 2017, at 9:01 AM, Adrian Zubarev via swift-evolution
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hello Swift community,
>
> on Github there is a PR for this proposal, but I couldn’t find any up to date
> thread, so I’m going to start by replying to the last message I found,
> without the last content.
>
> I really like where this proposal is going, and my personal preference are
> *continuation quotes*. However the proposed solution is still not perfect
> enough for me, because it still lacks of precise control about the trailing
> space characters in each line of a multi-line string.
>
> Proposed version looks like this:
>
> let xml = "<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>
> "<catalog>
> " <book id=\"bk101\" empty=\"\">
> " <author>\(author)</author>
> " <title>XML Developer's Guide</title>
> " <genre>Computer</genre>
> " <price>44.95</price>
> " <publish_date>2000-10-01</publish_date>
> " <description>An in-depth look at creating applications with
> XML.</description>
> " </book>
> "</catalog>
> ""
> I would like to pitch an enhancement to fix the last tiny part by adding the
> escaping character ‘' to the end of each line from 1 to (n - 1) of the
> n-lined string. This is similar to what Javascript allows us to do, except
> that we also have precise control about the leading space character through
> ’"’.
>
> The proposed version will become this:
>
> let xml = "<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\
> "<catalog>\ // If you need you can comment here
> " <book id=\"bk101\" empty=\"\">\
> " <author>\(author)</author>\
> " <title>XML Developer's Guide</title>\
> " <genre>Computer</genre>\
> " <price>44.95</price>\
> " <publish_date>2000-10-01</publish_date>\
> " <description>An in-depth look at creating applications with
> XML.</description>\
> " </book>\
> "</catalog>\
> ""
> Here is another example:
>
> let multilineString: String = "123__456__\ // indicates there is another part
> of the string on the next line
> "__789_____\ // aways starts with `"` and ends
> with either `\` or `"`
> "_____0_" // precise control about pre- and
> post-space-characters
>
> let otherString = "\(someInstance)\ /* only comments are allowed in between
> */ "text \(someOtherInstance) text"
> This is simply continuation quotes combined with backslash concatenation.
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Adrian Zubarev
> Sent with Airmail
>
>
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