You can use one of several escape sequences within a character literal to represent a character that you can’t include directly in the literal.
The full list of character literals includes:
- \’ – Single quote (U+0027)
- \” – Double quote (U+0022)
- \\ – Backslash (U+005C)
- \a – Alert (U+0007)
- \b – Backspace (U+0008)
- \f – Form feed (U+000c)
- \n – New line (U+000A)
- \r – Carriage return (U+000D)
- \t – Horizontal tab (U+0009)
- \v – Vertical tab (U+000B)
char single = '\''; char dquote = '\"'; char backslash = '\\'; char alert = '\a'; char backspace = '\b'; char formFeed = '\f'; char newLine = '\n'; char cr = '\r'; char horizTab = '\t'; char vertTab = '\v';
You can also use a backspace followed by 0 to indicate a null character.
char nullChar = '\0';
Filed under: Data Types Tagged: C#, Character Literals, Data Types, null
