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15.5.18.4 What are Strings And Quote-like Expressions?
Perl offers a plethora of different string constructs. Those that can
be used either as arguments to functions or inside braces for hash
lookups are generally supported by xgettext
.
- double-quoted strings
print gettext "Hello World!";
- single-quoted strings
print gettext 'Hello World!';
- the operator qq
print gettext qq |Hello World!|; print gettext qq <E-mail: <guido\@imperia.net>>;
The operator
qq
is fully supported. You can use arbitrary delimiters, including the four bracketing delimiters (round, angle, square, curly) that nest. - the operator q
print gettext q |Hello World!|; print gettext q <E-mail: <guido@imperia.net>>;
The operator
q
is fully supported. You can use arbitrary delimiters, including the four bracketing delimiters (round, angle, square, curly) that nest. - the operator qx
print gettext qx ;LANGUAGE=C /bin/date; print gettext qx [/usr/bin/ls | grep '^[A-Z]*'];
The operator
qx
is fully supported. You can use arbitrary delimiters, including the four bracketing delimiters (round, angle, square, curly) that nest.The example is actually a useless use of
gettext
. It will invoke thegettext
function on the output of the command specified with theqx
operator. The feature was included in order to make the interface consistent (the parser will extract all strings and quote-like expressions). - here documents
print gettext <<'EOF'; program not found in $PATH EOF print ngettext <<EOF, <<"EOF"; one file deleted EOF several files deleted EOF
Here-documents are recognized. If the delimiter is enclosed in single quotes, the string is not interpolated. If it is enclosed in double quotes or has no quotes at all, the string is interpolated.
Delimiters that start with a digit are not supported!
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