Does clojure have raw string?

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青春惊慌失措
青春惊慌失措 2020-12-09 09:59

In Python, I can prefix an r to a string literal (raw string) to tell the interpreter not translate special characters in the string:

>>&g         


        
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  • 2020-12-09 10:40

    Clojure strings are Java strings and the reader does not add anything significant to their interpretation. The reader page just says "standard Java escape characters are supported."

    You can escape the \ though:

    user> (print "abc\\nsdf#$%\\^")
    abc\nsdf#$%\^
    

    This only affect string literals read by the reader, so if you read strings from a file the reader never sees them:

    user> (spit "/tmp/foo" "abc\\nsdf#$%\\^")
    nil
    user> (slurp "/tmp/foo")
    "abc\\nsdf#$%\\^"
    user> (print (slurp "/tmp/foo"))
    abc\nsdf#$%\^nil
    user> 
    

    So, I think the basic answer is no.

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  • 2020-12-09 10:40

    Please also note that if you're using Counterclockwise (the Eclipse plugin for Clojure), there is a mode, called "smart paste" (disabled by default) which takes care of correctly escaping special characters when you paste inside an existing literal String.

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  • 2020-12-09 10:48

    May be of use to a literal regular expression for such purposes.

    user=> #"abc\nsdf#$%\^"
    #"abc\nsdf#$%\^"
    user=> (type #"abc\nsdf#$%\^")
    java.util.regex.Pattern
    user=> (println (str #"abc\nsdf#$%\^"))
    abc\nsdf#$%\^
    nil
    
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