Freewind
Freewind

Reputation: 198228

What's the difference of strings within single or double quotes in groovy?

def a = "a string"
def b = 'another'

Is there any difference? Or just like javascript to let's input ' and " easier in strings?

Upvotes: 141

Views: 76230

Answers (3)

Wyrmwood
Wyrmwood

Reputation: 3589

I know this is a very old question, but I wanted to add a caveat.

While it is correct that single (or triple single) quotes prevent interpolation in groovy, if you pass a shell command a single quoted string, the shell will perform parameter substitution, if the variable is an environment variable. Local variables or params will yield a bad substitution.

Upvotes: 2

tim_yates
tim_yates

Reputation: 171084

Single quotes are a standard java String

Double quotes are a templatable String, which will either return a GString if it is templated, or else a standard Java String. For example:

println 'hi'.class.name    // prints java.lang.String
println "hi".class.name    // prints java.lang.String

def a = 'Freewind'
println "hi $a"            // prints "hi Freewind"
println "hi $a".class.name // prints org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.GStringImpl

If you try templating with single quoted strings, it doesn't do anything, so:

println 'hi $a'            // prints "hi $a"

Also, the link given by julx in their answer is worth reading (esp. the part about GStrings not being Strings about 2/3 of the way down.

Upvotes: 202

julx
julx

Reputation: 9091

My understanding is that double-quoted string may contain embedded references to variables and other expressions. For example: "Hello $name", "Hello ${some-expression-here}". In this case a GString will be instantiated instead of a regular String. On the other hand single-quoted strings do not support this syntax and always result in a plain String. More on the topic here:

http://docs.groovy-lang.org/latest/html/documentation/index.html#all-strings

Upvotes: 24

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