I am trying to read a CSV file which contains escaped quote values such as:
"1","unquoted text","\"quoted text\""
It seems that SuperCSV wants quotes to be quoted as
"1","unquoted text","""quoted text"""
Is there a way to change the escape character to a backslash? I've looked at the docs and not seen anything.
Just found a link to an issue logged in github: https://github.com/super-csv/super-csv/issues/14
Seems like a different CSV handler is in order.
How do I search for "Land's End" in a LIKE syntax?
OR UPPER(MOPACTIVITY.MOPDESCRIPTION) LIKE '%LANDS'END%'
The apostrophe is making the code fail, but it is part of the company name. How do I make this work?
double it! or use special quoting http://www.oracle-developer.net/display.php?id=311
How can I perform interpolation within single quotes?
I tried something like this but there are two problems.
string = 'text contains "#{search.query}"'
It doesn't work
I need the final string to have the dynamic content wrapped in double quotes like so:
'text contains "candy"'
Probably seems strange but the gem that I'm working with requires this.
You can use %{text contains "#{search.query}"} if you don't want to escape the double quotes "text contains \"#{search.query}\"".
'Hi, %{professor}, You have been invited for %{booking_type}. You may accept, reject or keep discussing more about this offer' % {professor: 'Mr. Ashaan', booking_type: 'Dinner'}
Use
%q(text contains "#{search.query}")
which means start the string with single quote. Or if you want to start with double quote use:
%Q(text contains '#{text}')
I am creating a custom code highlight for notepad++. What I want to do is the following:
some fieldnames are writen in the code with a ' in front of their name, for exampe
if 'variable = "test" then ...
I would like to highlight these words, but notepad++ does not seem to allow a delimiter starting with ' and ending with a space, not does it allow space as an escape character. Also, using ' as a keyword and enabling prefix mode has no effect. Anyone has a suggestion? Should I use another expression to let notepad recognise the space/' ?
Thanks in advance!
If you only need to highlight a single word, you can use a keyword in prefix mode. However when using single or double quotes in a keyword, they need to be escaped with a backslash. So your keyword would be:
\'
This may not be possible in notepad++. I can get the behavior you want using a character other than a single quote, like a back-tic, but it doesn't seem to work with single or double quotes. I suspect those characters are treated special within the syntax highlighter.
Which style of Ruby string quoting do you favour? Up until now I've always used 'single quotes' unless the string contains certain escape sequences or interpolation, in which case I obviously have to use "double quotes".
However, is there really any reason not to just use double quoted strings everywhere?
Don't use double quotes if you have to escape them. And don't fall in "single vs double quotes" trap. Ruby has excellent support for arbitrary delimiters for string literals:
Mirror of Site - https://web.archive.org/web/20160310224440/http://rors.org/2008/10/26/dont-escape-in-strings
Original Site -
http://rors.org/2008/10/26/dont-escape-in-strings
I always use single quotes unless I need interpolation.
Why? It looks nicer. When you have a ton of stuff on the screen, lots of single quotes give you less "visual clutter" than lots of double quotes.
I'd like to note that this isn't something I deliberately decided to do, just something that I've 'evolved' over time in trying to achieve nicer looking code.
Occasionally I'll use %q or %Q if I need in-line quotes. I've only ever used heredocs maybe once or twice.
Like many programmers, I try to be as specific as is practical. This means that I try to make the compiler do as little work as possible by having my code as simple as possible. So for strings, I use the simplest method that suffices for my needs for that string.
<<END
For strings containing multiple newlines,
particularly when the string is going to
be output to the screen (and thus formatting
matters), I use heredocs.
END
%q[Because I strongly dislike backslash quoting when unnecessary, I use %Q or %q
for strings containing ' or " characters (usually with square braces, because they
happen to be the easiest to type and least likely to appear in the text inside).]
"For strings needing interpretation, I use %s."%['double quotes']
'For the most common case, needing none of the above, I use single quotes.'
My first simple test of the quality of syntax highlighting provided by a program is to see how well it handles all methods of quoting.
I use single quotes unless I need interpolation. The argument about it being troublesome to change later when you need interpolation swings in the other direction, too: You have to change from double to single when you found that there was a # or a \ in your string that caused an escape you didn't intend.
The advantage of defaulting to single quotes is that, in a codebase which adopts this convention, the quote type acts as a visual cue as to whether to expect interpolated expressions or not. This is even more pronounced when your editor or IDE highlights the two string types differently.
I use %{.....} syntax for multi-line strings.
I usually use double quotes unless I specifically need to disable escaping/interpolation.
I see arguments for both:
For using mostly double quotes:
The github ruby style guideline advocates always using double quotes:
It's easier to search for a string foobar by searching for "foobar" if you were consistent with quoting. However, I'm not. So I search for ['"]foobar['"] turning on regexps.
For using some combination of single double quotes:
Know if you need to look for string interpolation.
Might be slightly faster (although so slight it wasn't enough to affect the github style guide).
I used to use single quotes until I knew I needed interpolation. Then I found that I was wasting a lot of time when I'd go back and have to change some single-quotes to double-quotes. Performance testing showed no measurable speed impact of using double-quotes, so I advocate always using double-quotes.
The only exception is when using sub/gsub with back-references in the replacement string. Then you should use single quotes, since it's simpler.
mystring.gsub( /(fo+)bar/, '\1baz' )
mystring.gsub( /(fo+)bar/, "\\1baz" )
I use single quotes unless I need interpolation, or the string contains single quotes.
However, I just learned the arbitrary delimiter trick from Dejan's answer, and I think it's great. =)
Single quote preserve the characters inside them. But double quotes evaluate and parse them. See the following example:
"Welcome #{#user.name} to App!"
Results:
Welcome Bhojendra to App!
But,
'Welcome #{#user.name} to App!'
Results:
Welcome #{#user.name} to App!