Escaping Expression Language
There may be times when a property supports Expression Language, but the user wishes to use a literal value that follows the same syntax as the Expression Language. For example, a user may want to configure a property value to be the literal text Hello ${UserName}. In such a case, this can be accomplished by using an extra $ (dollar sign symbol) just before the expression to escape it (i.e., Hello $${UserName}). Unless the $ character is being used to escape an Expression, it should not be escaped. For example, the value Hello $$User$$Name should not escape the $ characters, so the literal value that will be used is Hello $$User$$Name.
If more than two $ characters are encountered sequentially before a {, then each pair of $ characters will be considered an escaping of the $ character. The escaping will be performed from left-to-right. To help illustrate this, consider that the variable abc contains the value xyz. Then, consider the following table of Expressions and their corresponding evaluated values:
| Expression | Value | Notes | 
| 
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| 
                         | 
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| 
                         | 
                         | No actual Expression is present here. | 
| 
                         | 
                         | The $ character is not escaped because it does not immediately precede an Expression. | 
| 
                         | 
                         | Because there is no closing brace here, there is no actual Expression and hence the $ characters are not escaped. | 
| 
                         | <Error> | This expression is not valid because it equates to an escaped $, followed by  | 
| 
                         | 
                         | There is no attribute named  | 

