> Am 21.04.2017 um 20:48 schrieb Xiaodi Wu via swift-evolution 
> <[email protected]>:
> 
> On Fri, Apr 21, 2017 at 1:45 PM, Erica Sadun <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> 
>> On Apr 21, 2017, at 12:40 PM, Xiaodi Wu via swift-evolution 
>> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> 
>> On Fri, Apr 21, 2017 at 8:48 AM, Robert Bennett via swift-evolution 
>> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> Xiaodi, I think one thing you're neglecting is that users may never print 
>> out a multiline literal string at all. A string might never be printed or 
>> read by a human outside of the code it resides in. In this case it seems 
>> perfectly reasonable to ask that it be possible to format the string nicely 
>> in the code and disregard how it would actually be printed.
>> 
>> Can you give an example of such a use case, where a string is never seen by 
>> a human but one cannot insert literal newlines and would need elided ones 
>> instead?
> 
> The most common reason is that the code is maintained by a (non-human) 
> developer, who wants to be able to see and update the code in a readable 
> form, but that represents a single line that will automatically wrapped by, 
> for example, a UITextView for (human) consumption. 
> 
> A different scenario from what Robert's describing, but sure. This goes to my 
> question to David Hart. Isn't this an argument for a feature to allow 
> breaking a single-line string literal across multiple lines? What makes this 
> a use case for some feature for _multiline_ string literals in particular?

I think „single-line“ and „multiline“ should foremost apply to the code 
representation of a string and not its result.
Otherwise "foo\nbar“ would be a multiline string with your reasoning, wouldn’t 
you agree?

Therefore a multiline string is one which is written over several lines of 
*code* to make maintenance easier. 
>From that follows naturally that as soon as line breaks are introduced for 
>hard wrapping we are talking about multiline strings.

In addition as soon as line breaks are introduced in the code the question of 
indentation arises which is solved neatly with the multiline string proposal by 
the position of the ending delimiter which is not possible with single-line 
strings. 

-Thorsten

_______________________________________________
swift-evolution mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution

Reply via email to