"Edward Loper" <edloper at gradient.cis.upenn.edu> wrote in message news:445DEC49.6050709 at gradient.cis.upenn.edu... > Talin wrote: >> Braces can be escaped using a backslash: >> >> "My name is {0} :-\{\}".format('Fred') >> >> Which would produce: >> >> "My name is Fred :-{}" > > Do backslashes also need to be backslashed then? If not, then what is > the translation of this:? > > r'abc\{%s\}' % 'x' > > I guess the only sensible translation if backslashes aren't backslashed > would be: > > .format('x') > > But the parsing of that format string seems fairly unintuitive to me. > If backslashes do need to be backslashed, then that fact needs to be > mentioned. AFAICT there would be no way to use raw strings with that method. That method would be using the escape sequence "\{" to indicate a bracket. Raw strings cannot have escape sequences. Additional backslashes are added to raw strings to remove anything that resembles an escape sequence. So either an additional layer of escaping is required (like with regex'es) or ".format()" would simply not be usable with raw strings. The problem of having an additional level of escaping is very shown with regexes. A simgle slash as the end value is either "\\\\" or r"\\".
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