Identifiers in Lua can be any string of letters, digits, and underscores, not beginning with a digit; for instance
i j i10 _ij aSomewhatLongName _INPUTYou should avoid identifiers starting with an underscore followed by one or more uppercase letters (e.g.,
_VERSION
); they are reserved for special uses in Lua. Usually, I reserve the identifier _
(a single underscore) for a dummy variable.
In Lua, the concept of what is a letter is locale dependent. Therefore, with a proper locale, you can use variable names such as
índice
or ação
. However, such names will make your program unsuitable to run in systems that do not support that locale.
The following words are reserved; we cannot use them as identifiers:
and break do else elseif end false for function if in local nil not or repeat return then true until whileLua is case-sensitive: and is a reserved word, but
And
and AND
are two other different identifiers.
A comment starts anywhere with a double hyphen (
--
) and runs until the end of the line. Lua also offers block comments, which start with --[[
and run until the corresponding ]]
. A common trick, when we want to comment out a piece of code, is to write the following:--[[ print(10) -- no action (comment) --]]Now, if we add a single hyphen to the first line, the code is in again:
---[[ print(10) --> 10 --]]In the first example, the
--
in the last line is still inside the block comment. In the second example, the sequence ---[[
does not start a block comment; so, the print
is outside comments. In this case, the last line becomes an independent comment, as it starts with --
.
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