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Identifiers

Riccardo De Benedictis edited this page Sep 13, 2022 · 1 revision

The names of variables, constants, methods, predicates, as well as types and objects, are called identifiers. A valid identifier for our domain description language is a sequence of one or more letters, digits, or underscore characters (_). Spaces, punctuation marks, and symbols cannot be part of an identifier. In addition, identifiers shall always begin either with a letter or with an underline character (_).

The domain description language uses a number of keywords to identify operations and data descriptions; therefore, identifiers created by a domain modeler cannot match these keywords. The standard reserved keywords that cannot be used as identifiers are:

bool, class, enum, fact, false, goal, new, or, predicate, real, return, string, this, true, typedef, void

It is worth to notice that the domain description language is a "case sensitive" language. This means that an identifier written in capital letters is not equivalent to another one with the same name but written in small letters. For example, the variable names MAX and max will be considered as separate identifiers. Here are some examples of identifiers:

i
MAX
max
first_name
_second_name