Yes, but then a similar complaint could be made that I wanted a String this 
time. The only real way to tell the difference is to use something like single 
quotes.

> On Jul 10, 2016, at 14:03, Rick Mann via swift-users <swift-users@swift.org> 
> wrote:
>
>
>> On Jul 10, 2016, at 11:44 , Saagar Jha via swift-users 
>> <swift-users@swift.org> wrote:
>>
>> Well, what if you wanted to create a String with one character? There’s no 
>> way to differentiate.
>
> That hardly seems like the justification. In that case, you'd specify the 
> type:
>
>    let s: String = '\n'
>
>
>>
>>> On Jul 7, 2016, at 02:35, 王 黎明 via swift-users 
>>> [swift-users@swift.org](mailto:swift-users@swift.org) wrote: >
>>
>> In Swift, we must specify the type for Character variables(because there’s 
>> no Character literals):
>>
>> let eol: Character = “\n”
>>
>> it's not a big problem, but, Is it the unique case that can’t use type infer?
>>
>> swift-users mailing list swift-users@swift.org 
>> https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-users
>>
>> --
>> -Saagar Jha
>> _______________________________________________
>> swift-users mailing list
>> swift-users@swift.org
>> https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-users
>
>
> --
> Rick Mann
> rm...@latencyzero.com
>
>
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