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File: //home/arjun/projects/buyercall/node_modules/sass/types/value/string.d.ts
import {Value} from './index';

/**
 * Sass's [string type](https://sass-lang.com/documentation/values/strings).
 *
 * @category Custom Function
 */
export class SassString extends Value {
  /**
   * Creates a new string.
   *
   * @param text - The contents of the string. For quoted strings, this is the
   * semantic content—any escape sequences that were been written in the source
   * text are resolved to their Unicode values. For unquoted strings, though,
   * escape sequences are preserved as literal backslashes.
   *
   * @param options.quotes - Whether the string is quoted. Defaults to `true`.
   */
  constructor(
    text: string,
    options?: {
      quotes?: boolean;
    }
  );

  /**
   * Creates an empty string.
   *
   * @param options.quotes - Whether the string is quoted. Defaults to `true`.
   */
  constructor(options?: {quotes?: boolean});

  /**
   * The contents of the string.
   *
   * For quoted strings, this is the semantic content—any escape sequences that
   * were been written in the source text are resolved to their Unicode values.
   * For unquoted strings, though, escape sequences are preserved as literal
   * backslashes.
   *
   * This difference allows us to distinguish between identifiers with escapes,
   * such as `url\u28 http://example.com\u29`, and unquoted strings that contain
   * characters that aren't valid in identifiers, such as
   * `url(http://example.com)`. Unfortunately, it also means that we don't
   * consider `foo` and `f\6F\6F` the same string.
   */
  get text(): string;

  /** Whether this string has quotes. */
  get hasQuotes(): boolean;

  /**
   * Sass's notion of this string's length.
   *
   * Sass treats strings as a series of Unicode code points while JavaScript
   * treats them as a series of UTF-16 code units. For example, the character
   * U+1F60A SMILING FACE WITH SMILING EYES is a single Unicode code point but
   * is represented in UTF-16 as two code units (`0xD83D` and `0xDE0A`). So in
   * JavaScript, `"n😊b".length` returns `4`, whereas in Sass
   * `string.length("n😊b")` returns `3`.
   */
  get sassLength(): number;

  /**
   * Converts `sassIndex` to a JavaScript index into {@link text}.
   *
   * Sass indices are one-based, while JavaScript indices are zero-based. Sass
   * indices may also be negative in order to index from the end of the string.
   *
   * In addition, Sass indices refer to Unicode code points while JavaScript
   * string indices refer to UTF-16 code units. For example, the character
   * U+1F60A SMILING FACE WITH SMILING EYES is a single Unicode code point but
   * is represented in UTF-16 as two code units (`0xD83D` and `0xDE0A`). So in
   * JavaScript, `"n😊b".charCodeAt(1)` returns `0xD83D`, whereas in Sass
   * `string.slice("n😊b", 1, 1)` returns `"😊"`.
   *
   * This function converts Sass's code point indices to JavaScript's code unit
   * indices. This means it's O(n) in the length of `text`.
   *
   * @throws `Error` - If `sassIndex` isn't a number, if that number isn't an
   * integer, or if that integer isn't a valid index for this string.
   */
  sassIndexToStringIndex(sassIndex: Value, name?: string): number;
}