There's no difference in meaning between these notations. Reference:
Both string and bytes literals may optionally be prefixed with a letter 'r' or 'R'; such strings are called raw strings and treat backslashes as literal characters
The same goes for other prefixes.
Now regarding VSCode behaviour:
- the first coloring (with yellow
{2}
) happens when the editor assumes you're writing a regular expression,
- the second one (with blue
{2}
) happens when the editor thinks you're writing a format string, something like "{0}, {1}!".format("Hello", "world")
.
This becomes more obvious when we add some more syntax:

Now, looks like VSCode should treat R"literal"
the same as r"literal"
, but instead it colors it the same as "literal"
, which is probably a tiny bug that nobody spotted because everyone writes lowercase r
.
Correction from comment: It's not a bug, it's a feature! VSCode's highlighter makes clever use of the fact that r
and R
prefixes are equivalent, and allows you, the developer, to have correct coloring by adopting a convention of using r
for regex raw strings and R
for non-regex raw strings.
Raw strings are often interpreted as regular expressions. This is a bit of a problem, because depending on the application this may actually not be the most common case. (...) MagicPython follows a convention that a lower-case r prefix means a regexp string, but an upper-case R prefix means just a raw string with no special regexp semantics.