At 11:04 20/12/2004 +0000, Ben Rubinstein wrote:
It's the glory of Transcript - so many ways to skin cats. I like q too, but it depends on what you're doing. [...snip...] But it depends on lots of things - if there's just one quote, and you're using the value immediately in an expression, you might as well add it explicitly as in the first example. If there's loads of quotes, and you're putting it into a variable anyway, then the fourth approach (backtick and separate replace) feels right to me. If you've got 'q' already defined, and it's for your own use so you'll immediately know what it means, then q is good too. Lots of quotes and returns, no backslashes? Format might look attractive. Horses for courses - Transcript gives us lots of choices.
Good exposition of the array of choices. Now that I've seen that, I've changed my own way of doing it to method 5:
function qq pWhat replace "`" with quote in pWhat return pWhat end qq
and so can simply write
qq("`C:\Ba\Ba.exe` `-E` `%1`")-- Alex.
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