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change deprecated String type to AbstractString as per 0.4 spec #1447

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26 changes: 22 additions & 4 deletions julia.html.markdown
Expand Up @@ -81,10 +81,13 @@ false
# Strings are created with "
"This is a string."

# Julia has several types of strings, including ASCIIString and UTF8String.
# More on this in the Types section.

# Character literals are written with '
'a'

# A string can be indexed like an array of characters
# Some strings can be indexed like an array of characters
"This is a string"[1] # => 'T' # Julia indexes from 1
# However, this is will not work well for UTF8 strings,
# so iterating over strings is recommended (map, for loops, etc).
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -314,7 +317,7 @@ end


# For loops iterate over iterables.
# Iterable types include Range, Array, Set, Dict, and String.
# Iterable types include Range, Array, Set, Dict, and AbstractString.
for animal=["dog", "cat", "mouse"]
println("$animal is a mammal")
# You can use $ to interpolate variables or expression into strings
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -537,6 +540,17 @@ subtypes(Number) # => 6-element Array{Any,1}:
# Real
subtypes(Cat) # => 0-element Array{Any,1}

# AbstractString, as the name implies, is also an abstract type
subtypes(AbstractString) # 8-element Array{Any,1}:
# Base.SubstitutionString{T<:AbstractString}
# DirectIndexString
# RepString
# RevString{T<:AbstractString}
# RopeString
# SubString{T<:AbstractString}
# UTF16String
# UTF8String

# Every type has a super type; use the `super` function to get it.
typeof(5) # => Int64
super(Int64) # => Signed
Expand All @@ -546,17 +560,21 @@ super(Number) # => Any
super(super(Signed)) # => Number
super(Any) # => Any
# All of these type, except for Int64, are abstract.
typeof("fire") # => ASCIIString
super(ASCIIString) # => DirectIndexString
super(DirectIndexString) # => AbstractString
# Likewise here with ASCIIString

# <: is the subtyping operator
type Lion <: Cat # Lion is a subtype of Cat
mane_color
roar::String
roar::AbstractString
end

# You can define more constructors for your type
# Just define a function of the same name as the type
# and call an existing constructor to get a value of the correct type
Lion(roar::String) = Lion("green",roar)
Lion(roar::AbstractString) = Lion("green",roar)
# This is an outer constructor because it's outside the type definition

type Panther <: Cat # Panther is also a subtype of Cat
Expand Down