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From: | Dmitry Gutov |
Subject: | Re: font-lock-syntactic-keywords obsolet? |
Date: | Mon, 20 Jun 2016 14:50:49 +0300 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:45.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/45.2 |
On 06/20/2016 01:22 PM, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
The code for raw strings is actually very new - it was only committed a week and a half ago. By their very nature, unterminated raw strings are a problem, since the terminating delimiter could occur anywhere later in the buffer. The trick has got to be to apply some artificial limit for after-change processing until that terminating delimiter is inserted.
So what if you have a literal that's longer than your chosen limit? A s-p-f could handle that. Your solution is basically a kludge. You're lucky raw strings are rare in C++ now; in many other languages, a normal string is not limited to a single line.
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