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Lexikon


off-side rule


A lexical convention due to Landin, allowing the scope of declarations in a program to be expressed by indentation. Any non-whitespace token to the left of the first such token on the previous line is taken to be the start of a new declaration. Used in, for example, Miranda and Haskell. [P.J. Landin "The Next 700 Programming Languages", CACM vol 9 pp157-165, March 1966]

In addition suitable contents:
[ ACM ] [ ag ] [ al ] [ am ] [ an ] [ ar ] [ arc ] [ as ] [ at ] [ b ] [ be ] [ by ] [ C ] [ CA ] [ ca ] [ CACM ] [ ch ] [ cl ] [ CM ] [ co ] [ con ] [ de ] [ dec ] [ du ] [ ec ] [ ed ] [ es ] [ fi ] [ fo ] [ for ] [ ge ] [ gr ] [ gu ] [ h ] [ hit ] [ in ] [ io ] [ ir ] [ is ] [ it ] [ J ] [ ke ] [ ken ] [ la ] [ li ] [ line ] [ M ] [ Miranda ] [ mm ] [ mp ] [ N ] [ ne ] [ ng ] [ no ] [ ns ] [ op ] [ pa ] [ pe ] [ pl ] [ pr ] [ program ] [ rc ] [ re ] [ ro ] [ sc ] [ scope ] [ se ] [ sk ] [ space ] [ st ] [ su ] [ T ] [ tar ] [ th ] [ to ] [ token ] [ ua ] [ us ] [ ve ] [ vi ] [ whitespace ] [ win ]






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