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The strings are sequences of 8-bit ASCII characters enclosed within quotation marks.
"This is a string"
reg [8*number_of_characters:1] string_variable;
The string should be given in one line. Strings can contain special characters (Example 1).
| 
       Character  | 
     
       Meaning  | 
    
| 
       \n  | 
     
       New line character  | 
    
| 
       \t  | 
     
       Tab character  | 
    
| 
       \\  | 
     
       \ character  | 
    
| 
       \  | 
     
       " character  | 
    
| 
       \ddd  | 
     
       A character specified by octal digit  | 
    
Table 24: Summary of special characters
String variables should be declared as reg type vectors (Example 2). Each character needs 8 bits.
If a string variable is used in an expression, it should be treated as an unsigned value. If the size of a string assigned to a string variable is smaller than the declared size of the variable, then it will be left-padded with zeros.
The null string " should be treated same as "\0.
Concatenations of string variables preserve left-padded zeros of these variables (Example 3).
Example 1
   "\n This is the first line\n 
   This is the second line"
   "\t Line\t with\t tab\t characters"
Example 2
reg [8*12:1] message;
The message variable can contain 12 characters.
Example 3
   reg [10*8:1] s1, s2;
   s1 = "Verilog";
   s2 = "-HDL";
   {s1, s2} <> {"Verilog", "-HDL"}
These expressions are not equal because {s1, s2} has 0s between "Verilog and "-HDL and {"Verilog, "-HDL} does not have any 0s between words.
Concatenation of string variables preserves left-padded zeros of these variables.
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