I start by defining a command to store the str开发者_C百科ing "Hello":
\newcommand{\textstring}{Hello}
I would like to append the string " world" but unfortunately this code causes an error:
\renewcommand{\textstring}{\textstring world}
You can accomplish this by using \expandafter. For example:
% redefine \textstring by appending " world" to it
\expandafter\def\expandafter\textstring\expandafter{\textstring { }world}
If you don't use \expandafter then you end up with a recursion problem. You can read more about it here.
Used the input from this question to generate
\edef\history{ }
\newcommand{\historyAdd}[1]{\edef\history{\history{}#1 }}
\newcommand{\historyAddEcho}[1]{#1\historyAdd{#1}}
The history was:
\historyAddEcho{Hi brian}
\historyAdd{you idiot}
\historyAddEcho{how are you?}
\lipsum[3]
The real history was: \history
(sorry brian, but this was the most illustrative example I could think of)
The scructure can help you create a simple todo list with something like:
\lipsum[1]
\historyAdd{\\work more with: }
\section{\historyAddEcho{Introduction}}
\lipsum[1]
\historyAdd{\\work more with the text on page \thepage}
\lipsum[1]
\section{ToDo:}
\history
Hope this can help someone out there trying to concat strings for this purpose.
The problem is that this overwrites the definition of \textstring, rather than referencing the old one. In order to append, the standard way is to use the TeX command \edef, which expands the definition before assigning something. Thus, if you have
\def\textstring{Hello} % Or with \newcommand
\edef\textstring{\textstring{} world}
LaTeX will change the right-hand side of the \edef into Hello world, and then reassign that to \textstring, which is what you want. Instead, in your current version, the \newcommand doesn't expand the right-hand side, so when you use \textstring, it expands to \textstring world, which itself expands to \textstring world world, which itself expands to… you get the idea.
Similar to David Underhill's answer is the following
\newcommand{\textstring}{Hello}
\makeatletter
\g@addto@macro\textstring{ world}
\makeatother
The g@addto@macro macro achieves the same effect, and may produce slightly more readable code (especially if your code is in a package/style, or if you're already in a \makeatletter & \makeatother situation)
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