I know that single and double quotes have at least some level of equivelence in Dart. For example,
var myString = "Hello world"; // double quotes and
var myString = 'Hello world'; // single quotes have no programmatic difference to my knowledge.
I keep seeing them used seemingly interchangeably in various examples and in some documentation. I'm wondering if there is a subtle difference that I am missing or if there is a recommended style to follow, especially in Flutter.
This is a Q&A self answer after reading the Flutter and Dart style guides.
final myString = 'hello'; is the same as
final myString = "hello"; Use a \ backslash to escape single quotes in a single quote string.
final myString = 'Bob\'s dog'; // Bob's dog Same thing to escape double quotes in a double quote string.
final myString = "a \"quoted\" word"; // a "quoted" word But no need to escape anything if the delimiter is different.
final myString = "Bob's dog"; // Bob's dog final myString = 'a "quoted" word'; // a "quoted" word Also no need to worry about the value passed into an interpolated string.
final value = '"quoted"'; // "quoted" final myString = "a $value word"; // a "quoted" word The Flutter style guide recommends using single quotes for everything
final myString = 'hello'; except for nested strings
print('Hello ${name.split(" ")[0]}'); or strings containing single quotes (optional)
final myString = "Bob's dog"; final myString = 'Bob\'s dog'; // ok The Dart style guide appears to be silent on the issue.
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