This comparison of programming languages (strings) compares the features of string data structures or text-string processing for over 52 various computer programming languages.
Different languages use different symbols for the concatenation operator. Many languages use the "+" symbol, though several deviate from this.
Operator | Languages |
---|---|
+ | ALGOL 68, BASIC, C++, C#, Cobra, Dart, Eiffel, F#, Go, Java, JavaScript, Object Pascal, Objective-C, Pascal, Python, Ruby, Rust, Scala, Swift, Turing, Windows PowerShell, Ya |
++ | Erlang, Haskell |
$+ | mIRC scripting language |
& | Ada, AppleScript, COBOL (for literals only), Curl, FreeBASIC, Excel, Nim, Seed7, VHDL, Visual Basic, Visual Basic .NET |
concatenate | Common Lisp |
. | Autohotkey, Maple (up to version 5), Perl, PHP |
~ | D, Raku, Symfony (Expression Language component) |
|| | Icon, Maple (from version 6), PL/I, Rexx, Standard SQL |
<> | Mathematica, Wolfram Language |
.. | Lua |
: | Pick Basic |
, | APL, J, Smalltalk |
^ | F#, OCaml, rc, Standard ML |
// | Fortran |
* | Julia |
strcat
function must be used.STRING
statement to concatenate string variables.[x y]
" to concatenate x and y.+
" sign but at the risk of ambiguity if a string representing a number and a number are together.&
" and the function "=CONCATENATE(X,Y)
".concat!
macro and the format!
macro, of which the latter is the most prevalent throughout the documentation and examples.This section compares styles for declaring a string literal.
An expression is "interpolated" into a string when the compiler/interpreter evaluates it and inserts the result in its place.
Syntax | Language(s) |
---|---|
$"hello, {name}"
|
C#, Visual Basic .NET |
"Hello, $name!"
|
Bourne shell, Dart, Perl, PHP, Windows PowerShell |
qq(Hello, $name!)
|
Perl (alternate) |
"Hello, {$name}!"
|
PHP (alternate) |
"Hello, #{name}!"
|
CoffeeScript, Ruby |
%Q(Hello, #{name}!)
|
Ruby (alternate) |
(format nil "Hello, ~A" name)
|
Common Lisp |
`Hello, ${name}!`
|
JavaScript (ECMAScript 6) |
"Hello, \(name)!"
|
Swift |
f'Hello, {name}!'
|
Python |
"Escaped" quotes means that a 'flag' symbol is used to warn that the character after the flag is used in the string rather than ending the string.
Syntax | Language(s) |
---|---|
"I said \"Hello, world!\""
|
C, C++, C#, D, Dart, F#, Java, JavaScript, Mathematica, Ocaml, Perl, PHP, Python, Rust, Swift, Wolfram Language, Ya |
'I said \'Hello, world!\''
|
CoffeeScript, Dart (alternate), JavaScript (alternate), Python (alternate) |
"I said `"Hello, world!`""
|
Windows Powershell |
"I said ^"Hello, world!^""
|
REBOL |
{I said "Hello, world!"}
|
REBOL (alternate) |
"I said, %"Hello, World!%""
|
Eiffel |
!"I said \"Hello, world!\""
|
FreeBASIC |
r#"I said "Hello, world!""#
|
Rust (alternate) |
"Dual quoting" means that whenever a quote is used in a string, it is used twice, and one of them is discarded and the single quote is then used within the string.
Syntax | Language(s) |
---|---|
"I said ""Hello, world!"""
|
Ada, ALGOL 68, COBOL, Excel, Fortran, FreeBASIC, Visual Basic (.NET) |
'I said ''Hello, world!'''
|
APL, COBOL, Fortran, Object Pascal, Pascal, rc, Smalltalk, SQL |
"Raw" means the compiler treats every character within the literal exactly as written, without processing any escapes or interpolations.
Syntax | Language(s) |
---|---|
'Hello, world!'
|
APL, Bourne shell, Fortran, Object Pascal, Pascal, Perl, PHP, Pick Basic, Ruby, Smalltalk, Windows PowerShell |
q(Hello, world!)
|
Perl (alternate) |
%q(Hello, world!)
|
Ruby (alternate) |
R"(Hello, world!)"
|
C++11 |
@"Hello, world!"
|
C#, F# |
r"Hello, world!"
|
Cobra, D, Dart, Python, Rust |
r'Hello, world!'
|
Dart (alternate) |
"Hello, world!"
|
Cobol, FreeBASIC, Pick Basic |
`Hello, world!`
|
D, Go |
raw"Hello, world!"
|
Scala |
String.raw`Hello, World!`
|
JavaScript (ECMAScript 6) [1] |
Many languages have a syntax specifically intended for strings with multiple lines. In some of these languages, this syntax is a here document or "heredoc": A token representing the string is put in the middle of a line of code, but the code continues after the starting token and the string's content doesn't appear until the next line. In other languages, the string's content starts immediately after the starting token and the code continues after the string literal's terminator.
Syntax | Here document |
Language(s) |
---|---|---|
<<EOF I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them EOF |
Yes | Bourne shell, Perl, Ruby |
<<<EOF I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them EOF |
Yes | PHP |
@" I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them "@ |
No | Windows Powershell |
"[ I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them ]" |
No | Eiffel |
""" I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them """ |
No | CoffeeScript, Dart, Groovy, Kotlin, Python, Swift |
" I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them " |
No | Common Lisp (all strings are multiline), Rust (all strings are multiline), Visual Basic .NET (all strings are multiline) |
r" I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them " |
No | Rust |
[[ I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them ]] |
No | Lua |
` I have a lot of things to say and so little time to say them ` |
No | JavaScript (ECMAScript 6) |
Syntax | Variant name | Language(s) |
---|---|---|
13HHello, world!
|
Hollerith notation | Fortran 66 |
(indented with whitespace) | Indented with whitespace and newlines | YAML |
String.raw``
still processes string interpolation.
![]() | Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison of programming languages (strings).
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