5.8 Whitespace
In the C#
language, spaces, tabs, and newlines are considered to be
"whitespace" (so named because you
see only the white of the underlying
"page"). Extra whitespace is
generally ignored in C# statements. Thus, you can write:
myVariable = 5;
or:
myVariable = 5;
and the compiler will treat the two statements as identical. The key
is to use whitespace to make the program more readable to the
programmer; the compiler is indifferent.
The exception to this rule is that whitespace within a
string is treated as literal; it is not
ignored. If you write:
Console.WriteLine("Hello World")
each space between "Hello" and
"World" is treated as another
character in the string. (In this case there is only one space
character.)
Problems arise only when you do not leave space between logical
program elements that require it. For instance, although the
expression:
int myVariable = 5;
is the same as:
int myVariable =5;
it is not the same as:
intmyVariable =5;
The compiler knows that the whitespace on either side of the
assignment operator is extra, but the whitespace between the type
declaration int and the variable name myVariable is
not extra; it is required.
This is not surprising; the whitespace allows the compiler to
parse the keyword int rather than some unknown
term intmyVariable. You are free to add as much or as little
whitespace between int and myVariable as you care to, but there must
be at least one whitespace character (typically a space or tab).
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Visual Basic programmers take note: in C#, the end-of-line has no
special significance. Statements are ended
with semicolons, not newline characters. There is no line
continuation character because none is
needed.
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