Page 192 - CSharp/C#
P. 192
int bar = 42;
string resultString = $"The foo is {foo}, and the bar is {bar}.";
Console.WriteLine(resultString);
Output:
The foo is 34, and the bar is 42.
View Demo
Braces within strings can still be used, like this:
var foo = 34;
var bar = 42;
// String interpolation notation (new style)
Console.WriteLine($"The foo is {{foo}}, and the bar is {{bar}}.");
This produces the following output:
The foo is {foo}, and the bar is {bar}.
Using interpolation with verbatim string
literals
Using @ before the string will cause the string to be interpreted verbatim. So, e.g. Unicode
characters or line breaks will stay exactly as they've been typed. However, this will not effect the
expressions in an interpolated string as shown in the following example:
Console.WriteLine($@"In case it wasn't clear:
\u00B9
The foo
is {foo},
and the bar
is {bar}.");
Output:
In case it wasn't clear:
\u00B9
The foo
is 34,
and the bar
is 42.
View Demo
https://riptutorial.com/ 138

