I think that's a bit too strong. This has been unquestionably valid, correct Python -- it was an intentional feature from the start. It may not have turned out great, but I think that before warning loudly about every instance of this we should have a silent deprecation (which you can turn into a visible warning with a command-line flag or a warnings filter). And we should have agreement that we're eventually going to make it a syntax error. On Mon, Feb 23, 2015 at 1:57 AM, Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com> wrote:
See topic "Unrecognized backslash escapes in string literals" in Python list [1]. I agree that this is a problem, especially for novices (but even experience users can make a typo). May be emit SyntaxWarning on unrecognized backslash escapes? An exception is already raised on invalid octal or hexadecimal escapes. '\x' is syntax error, not two characters '\\' and 'x'.
[1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.python.general/772455
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