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Groups > gnu.bash.bug > #15583
| From | L A Walsh <bash@tlinx.org> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | gnu.bash.bug |
| Subject | Re: quote removal issues within character class |
| Date | 2019-11-09 06:46 -0800 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1108.1573310775.13325.bug-bash@gnu.org> (permalink) |
| References | <CAH7i3Lr68CiVXLR9_HoOgQa7Vd-zyVZ+fck-0K3uQPTNSirU2Q@mail.gmail.com> <CAH7i3LrZFvJ1ELJzTdQzF1tTqhi9FDrA7xWWYWrd4RgWJs0Wtg@mail.gmail.com> <16736.1573257142@jinx.noi.kre.to> <14879.1573303743@jinx.noi.kre.to> <5DC6D12D.6040900@tlinx.org> |
On 2019/11/09 04:49, Robert Elz wrote:
> There's also
>
> The special characters '.', '*', '[', and '\\'
> (<period>, <asterisk>, <left-square-bracket>, and <backslash>,
> respectively) shall lose their special meaning within a bracket
> expression.
>
----
Is this really what the standard says, because '\\' is not a character, but
2 characters. They could use "\\" but if a backslash is between single
quotes, it loses its special meaning. The only way to get a backslash
when using single quotes that I've found is to end the single-quote
then use the backslash. So if you wanted to insert single quotes in
a string that is single-quoted, you would have to do this:
'this is a single-quote(SQ) quoted string using a SQ ('\'') within
the single quote.'
Alternatively using double-quotes or another quoting
mechanism might be preferable.
I find it odd that the standard would try to use a backslash within
a SQ'd string as a literalizer.
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Re: quote removal issues within character class L A Walsh <bash@tlinx.org> - 2019-11-09 06:46 -0800
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