Reputation:
How to pass large no.of characters in string value. Usually we pass private final String title="Test String". But how to pass the below value in string.
**Test HTML code to insert**
<div id="dededededededede">
Fill out my <a href="https://google.google.com/forms/z1dededede43434niu3pq">frfrtgte form</a>.
</div>
'autoResize':true,
'height':'575',
'async':true,
'host':'dede.com',
'header':'sdedew',
'ssl':true};
s.src = ('https:' == d.state.protocol ? 'https://' : 'http://') + 'secure.deded.com/scripts/embed/form.js';
s.onload = s.onreadystatechange = function() {
var rs = this.readyState; if (rs) if (rs != 'complete') if (rs != 'loaded') return;
try { z1pmdedefr443434frfpq = new googleForm();z1pdedede4343434u3pq.initialize(options);z1pmkdedede434343niu3pq.display(); } catch (e) {}};
var scr = d.getElementsByTagName(t)[0], par = scr.parentNode; par.insertBefore(s, scr);
})(document, 'script');</script>
Upvotes: 0
Views: 559
Reputation:
With newer Java1 you can use Text Blocks like:
String text = """
**Test HTML code to insert**
<div id="dededededededede">
Fill out my <a href="https://google.google.com/forms/z1dededede43434niu3pq">frfrtgte form</a>.
</div>
'autoResize':true,
'height':'575',
'async':true,
'host':'dede.com',
'header':'sdedew',
'ssl':true};
s.src = ('https:' == d.state.protocol ? 'https://' : 'http://') + 'secure.deded.com/scripts/embed/form.js';
s.onload = s.onreadystatechange = function() {
var rs = this.readyState; if (rs) if (rs != 'complete') if (rs != 'loaded') return;
try { z1pmdedefr443434frfpq = new googleForm();z1pdedede4343434u3pq.initialize(options);z1pmkdedede434343niu3pq.display(); } catch (e) {}};
var scr = d.getElementsByTagName(t)[0], par = scr.parentNode; par.insertBefore(s, scr);
})(document, 'script');</script>
""";
In short: allows quotes and line separators; indentation of closing """
is important - defines how many spaces at start of line will be deleted. See also JEP 368 or the corresponding chapter of the Java Language Specification.
Alternative if Text Blocks are not available (not-so-new Java versions):
\n
, or \r\n
for Windows or just the result of System.lineSeparator()
;\"
;\\
;Example:
String text = "" // the empty string here is just for nicer formatting
+ "**Test HTML code to insert**\n"
+ "<div id=\"dededededededede\">\n"
+ " Fill out my <a href=\"https://google.google.com/forms/z1dededede43434niu3pq\">frfrtgte form</a>.\n"
+ "</div>\n"
+ ...
+ "})(document, 'script');</script>";
Note: the compiler creates one single (big) string literal, no concatenation is executed at runtime despite +
being used
1 Java 15 or later, Preview Feature in Java 14
Upvotes: 1