octave: Continuation Lines

 
 10.10 Continuation Lines
 ========================
 
 In the Octave language, most statements end with a newline character and
 you must tell Octave to ignore the newline character in order to
 continue a statement from one line to the next.  Lines that end with the
 characters ‘...’ are joined with the following line before they are
 divided into tokens by Octave’s parser.  For example, the lines
 
      x = long_variable_name ...
          + longer_variable_name ...
          - 42
 
 form a single statement.
 
    Any text between the continuation marker and the newline character is
 ignored.  For example, the statement
 
      x = long_variable_name ...    # comment one
          + longer_variable_name ...comment two
          - 42                      # last comment
 
 is equivalent to the one shown above.
 
    Inside double-quoted string constants, the character ‘\’ has to be
 used as continuation marker.  The ‘\’ must appear at the end of the line
 just before the newline character:
 
      s = "This text starts in the first line \
      and is continued in the second line."
 
 Input that occurs inside parentheses can be continued to the next line
 without having to use a continuation marker.  For example, it is
 possible to write statements like
 
      if (fine_dining_destination == on_a_boat
          || fine_dining_destination == on_a_train)
        seuss (i, will, not, eat, them, sam, i, am, i,
               will, not, eat, green, eggs, and, ham);
      endif
 
 without having to add to the clutter with continuation markers.