I'm sure it's a historical artifact more than a requirement,
especially considering how some improvements made to C++ are
trickling back into C (i.e. '//'-style comments) if only because of popular demand. The "correct" C example, using backslashes, is reasonably:
char *foo = "This\n\
Is\n\
Rather\n\
Tedious";
I suppose that earlier and/or less robust C compilers would not comprehend the concept of a string being continued onto a second line.
I'm sorry if you mistook my unfortunate "ignorance" as being anti-C. I meant nothing of the sort. I'm rather a fan of C++.
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