[Python-Dev] PEP 295 - Interpretation of multiline string constants
Stepan Koltsov
yozh@mx1.ru
Thu, 25 Jul 2002 20:03:38 +0400
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Hi, all.
I wrote a PEP, its number is 295, it is in attachment.
It should be posted somewhere to be discussed so it is here.
Please, look at it and say what you think.
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mailto: Stepan Koltsov <yozh@mx1.ru>
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PEP: 295
Title: Interpretation of multiline string constants
Version: $Revision: 1.1 $
Last-Modified: $Date: 2002/07/22 20:45:07 $
Author: yozh@mx1.ru (Stepan Koltsov)
Status: Draft
Type: Standards Track
Created: 22-Jul-2002
Python-Version: 3.0
Post-History:
Abstract
This PEP describes an interpretation of multiline string constants
for Python. It suggests stripping spaces after newlines and
stripping a newline if it is first character after an opening
quotation.
Rationale
This PEP proposes an interpretation of multiline string constants
in Python. Currently, the value of string constant is all the
text between quotations, maybe with escape sequences substituted,
e.g.:
def f():
"""
la-la-la
limona, banana
"""
def g():
return "This is \
string"
print repr(f.__doc__)
print repr(g())
prints:
'\n\tla-la-la\n\tlimona, banana\n\t'
'This is \tstring'
This PEP suggest two things
- ignore the first character after opening quotation, if it is
newline
- second: ignore in string constants all spaces and tabs up to
first non-whitespace character, but no more then current
indentation.
After applying this, previous program will print:
'la-la-la\nlimona, banana\n'
'This is string'
To get this result, previous programs could be rewritten for
current Python as (note, this gives the same result with new
strings meaning):
def f():
"""\
la-la-la
limona, banana
"""
def g():
"This is \
string"
Or stripping can be done with library routines at runtime (as
pydoc does), but this decreases program readability.
Implementation
I'll say nothing about CPython, Jython or Python.NET.
In original Python, there is no info about the current indentation
(in spaces) at compile time, so space and tab stripping should be
done at parse time. Currently no flags can be passed to the
parser in program text (like from __future__ import xxx). I
suggest enabling or disabling of this feature at Python compile
time depending of CPP flag Py_PARSE_MULTILINE_STRINGS.
Alternatives
New interpretation of string constants can be implemented with flags
'i' and 'o' to string constants, like
i"""
SELECT * FROM car
WHERE model = 'i525'
""" is in new style,
o"""SELECT * FROM employee
WHERE birth < 1982
""" is in old style, and
"""
SELECT employee.name, car.name, car.price FROM employee, car
WHERE employee.salary * 36 > car.price
""" is in new style after Python-x.y.z and in old style otherwise.
Also this feature can be disabled if string is raw, i.e. if flag 'r'
specified.
Copyright
This document has been placed in the Public Domain.
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