Is there's any difference between char literals '\"' and '"' ?
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Ummm ... it would have taken 30 seconds to test it yourself. – Stephen C Jul 11 '10 at 22:06
1 Answers
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There is absolutely no difference. The two char are ==.
System.out.println('\"' == '"'); // prints "true"
Strictly speaking it's not necessary to escape a double quote in a char literal, but it doesn't change this fact that \" denotes the double quote character \u0022.
References
String analog
We also have the analogous situation for String literals:
System.out.println("\'".equals("'")); // prints "true"
In fact, we can even go a step further and use == for reference equality:
System.out.println("\'" == "'"); // prints "true"
The second snippet proves that the two string literals are really equal, and therefore subject to string interning at compile-time.
References
- JLS 3.10.5 String Literals
String literals --or, more generally, strings that are the values of constant expressions-- are "interned" so as to share unique instances, using the method
String.intern.
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Summary
- A single-quote in a
charliteral MUST be escaped- Because
charliteral is quoted in single-quotes
- Because
- A double-quote in a
Stringliteral MUST be escaped- Because
Stringliteral is quoted in double-quotes
- Because
- It doesn't hurt to escape, even when it's not necessary
- Go with what's most readable
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