You can use raw string literals:
std::string s = R"(\Some\Path)";
This feature is available in C++11.
Note that for file system paths you can use forward slashes:
std::string s = "/Some/Path";
题
I'm coming to C++ from C#. I have a string with a lot of backslashes in it and I'd like to read the string as raw text. Does C++ have something like C#'s "at string"? For example:
string s = @"\\Some\Path";
In my C++ file I'm using:
#include <string>
解决方案
You can use raw string literals:
std::string s = R"(\Some\Path)";
This feature is available in C++11.
Note that for file system paths you can use forward slashes:
std::string s = "/Some/Path";
其他提示
According to the c++11 standard it has raw strings like R"...."
, I say according to the standard because I have never needed to use them :).
This kind of string can be very useful for things like regexes.