In Java, is there a way to write a string literal without having to escape quotes?

Say you have a String literal with a lot of quotation marks inside it. You could escape them all, but it's a pain, and difficult to read.

In some languages, you can just do this:

foo = '"Hello, World"';

In Java, however, '' is used for chars, so you can't use it for Strings this way. Some languages have syntax to work around this. For example, in python, you can do this:

"""A pretty "convenient" string"""

Does Java have anything similar?

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8 Answers

No, and I've always been annoyed by the lack of different string-literal syntaxes in Java.

Here's a trick I've used from time to time:

String myString = "using `backticks` instead of quotes".replace('`', '"');

I mainly only do something like that for a static field. Since it's static the string-replace code gets called once, upon initialization of the class. So the runtime performance penalty is practically nonexistent, and it makes the code considerably more legible.

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The answer is no, and the proof resides in the Java Language Specification:

 StringLiteral: "StringCharacters" StringCharacters: StringCharacter | StringCharacters StringCharacter StringCharacter: InputCharacter but not " or \ | EscapeSequence

As you can see a StringLiteral can just be bound by " and cannot contain special character without escapes..

A side note: you can embed Groovy inside your project, this will extend the syntax of Java allowing you to use '''multi line string ''', ' "string with single quotes" ' and also "string with ${variable}".

Update Dec. 2018 (12 months later):

Raw string literals (which are on the amber list) won't make it to JDK 12.
See the criticisms here.


There might be in a future version of Java (10 or more).

See JEPS 8196004 from January 2018: ("JEP" is the "JDK Enhancement Program")

JEP draft: Raw String Literals

Add a new kind of literal, a raw string literal, to the Java programming language.
Like the traditional string literal, a raw string literal produces a String, but does not interpret string escapes and can span multiple lines of source code.

So instead of:

Runtime.getRuntime().exec("\"C:\\Program Files\\foo\" bar");
String html = "<html>\n" " <body>\n" + " <p>Hello World.</p>\n" + " </body>\n" + "</html>\n";
System.out.println("this".matches("\\w\\w\\w\\w"));

You would be able to type:

Runtime.getRuntime().exec(`"C:\Program Files\foo" bar"`);
String html = `<html> <body> <p>Hello World.</p> </body> </html> `;
System.out.println("this".matches(`\w\w\w\w`));

Neat!

But it is still just a draft: it will need to posted, submitted, be a candidate, and funded, before being completed and making it into the next JDK.

Since Java 15¹ there is new feature called Text Blocks. It looks similar to what you mentioned is available in Python:

String text = """ { "property": "value", "otherProperty": 12 } """;

More details with examples can be found here: .


¹ Previewed in Java 13 and 14.

1

Simple answer: No.

For longer strings that must be escaped, I usually read them from some external resource.

you can also use StringEscapeUtils from apache commons

UPDATE: If someone is interested in some examples here is a useful link :

4

You could use left and/or right quotes if you don't mind the difference, they look pretty similar:

"These “double quotes” don't need nor want to be escaped"

The following seems to work for me:

String x = "Some Text" + '"' + "More Text" + '"' + "Even More Text";

I think because char is the primitive variable type for String, Strings and chars can be combined (at least the eclipse compiler doesn't seem to complain).

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