Unrecognized backslash escapes in string literals
Peter Otten
__peter__ at web.de
Mon Feb 23 03:41:42 EST 2015
Ben Finney wrote:
> Chris Angelico <rosuav at gmail.com> writes:
>
>> That said, though, there's probably a lot of code out there that
>> depends on backslashes being non-special, so it's quite probably
>> something that can't be changed. But it'd be nice to be able to turn
>> on a warning for it.
>
> If you're motivated to see such warnings, an appropriate place to
> implement them would be in PyLint or another established static code
> analysis tool.
Pylint already produces a warning. However, it cannot read the author's
mind:
$ cat tmp.py
print("C:\alpha")
print("C:\beta")
print("C:\gamma")
$ pylint tmp.py
************* Module tmp
W: 3, 0: Anomalous backslash in string: '\g'. String constant might be
missing an r prefix. (anomalous-backslash-in-string)
C: 1, 0: Missing module docstring (missing-docstring)
The same would go for a warning built into the compiler. Maybe having
editors highlight the special combinations would be the more helpful
approach. A tooltip could explain the meaning.
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