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In that context, name resolution refers to the association of those not-necessarily-unique names with the intended program entities. The algorithms that determine what those identifiers refer to in specific contexts are part of the language definition. The complexity of these algorithms is influenced by the sophistication of the language.
In a JSON user group thread, Douglas Crockford incorrectly used the term "JsonML" to describe two variants: the "array form" and "object form". [3] This was a misuse of the term JsonML which has always stood to mean what Crockford referred to as the "array form".
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Any object code produced by compilers is usually linked with other pieces of object code (produced by the same or another compiler) by a type of program called a linker. The linker needs a great deal of information on each program entity. For example, to correctly link a function it needs its name, the number of arguments and their types, and ...
Symbol Example Meaning (of example) Unicode code point High minus [14] ¯ ¯3: Denotes a negative number U+00AF ¯ MACRON: Lamp, Comment ⍝ ⍝This is a comment: Everything to the right of ⍝ denotes a comment U+235D ⍝ APL FUNCTIONAL SYMBOL UP SHOE JOT: RightArrow, Branch, GoTo → →This_Label: →This_Label sends APL execution to This_Label:
If a symbol is unknown, the Lisp reader creates a new symbol. In Common Lisp, symbols have the following attributes: a name, a value, a function, a list of properties and a package. [6] In Common Lisp it is also possible that a symbol is not interned in a package. Such symbols can be printed, but when read back, a new symbol needs to be created.
The Language Server Protocol (LSP) is an open, JSON-RPC-based protocol for use between source code editors or integrated development environments (IDEs) and servers that provide "language intelligence tools": [1] programming language-specific features like code completion, syntax highlighting and marking of warnings and errors, as well as refactoring routines.
symbol: Unicode symbolic atoms (aka identifiers) blob: Binary data of user-defined encoding; clob: Text data of user-defined encoding; sexp: Ordered collections of values with application-defined semantics; Each Ion type supports a null variant, indicating a lack of value while maintaining a strict type (e.g., null.int, null.struct).