Python's triple-quoted multiline string is a wonderful feature. It vastly simplifies the writing of polyglot scripts (where the same file contains multiple different languages of code in it), hiding any non-Python code inside a triple quoted string. Had need of a Makefile+Python setup today...
(Note that if the formatting is messed up, just make sure the "@python3 Makefile" line is indented with exactly one tab.) # Makefile+Python script hide_from_python = """ " all: README.md @python3 Makefile define now_hide_from_make = " """ # At this point, it's all Python. :) import this print("Hello, world") # Postscript to clean everything up. """ " endef end_all_hiding = " """ ----------- The same trick can be done with quite a few other languages. The non-Python part might be a shell script that locates an interpreter, an Markdown file that explains what to do if you accidentally displayed this file instead of downloading it, a Pike server that runs a supporting server (that one's easy since Pike has a multiline string spelled #" ... ", which looks like a comment to Python), a systemd service file to symlink into your jobs directory... you name it. The only hard part is making the OTHER language ignore the parts it needs to ignore! :) ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list