cfgbd added the comment:

Thanks for comment. Here I got my answer from string docs.

Even in a raw literal, quotes can be escaped with a backslash, but the 
backslash remains in the result; for example, r"\"" is a valid string literal 
consisting of two characters: a backslash and a double quote; r"\" is not a 
valid string literal (even a raw string cannot end in an odd number of 
backslashes). Specifically, a raw literal cannot end in a single backslash 
(since the backslash would escape the following quote character). Note also 
that a single backslash followed by a newline is interpreted as those two 
characters as part of the literal, not as a line continuation.

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Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org>
<http://bugs.python.org/issue27947>
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