Why is dot (".") not considered an operator?
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In other parts of the documentation, "dot" is explicitly not called an operator, and referred to as a character. It can be used as part of other legal operators (i.e. ".*").
For dot access in structs, what would you call the dot character if not an "operator" ?
Also, in the following error message, it is called an operator :
. =123
. =123
↑
Invalid use of operator.
1 commentaire
Walter Roberson
le 28 Nov 2023
none of the indexing operations are listed there
Réponses (1)
Steven Lord
le 28 Nov 2023
1 vote
This documentation page lists it in the "Special Characters" section. [To be fair it also lists the colon operator in that table.]
I'm curious as to the reason for your question. Is there some functionality you expected the dot character to have (because it "felt like" an operator) that it didn't (or vice versa)?
2 commentaires
ES
le 28 Nov 2023
Walter Roberson
le 28 Nov 2023
Except for the () listed there, all of the operations listed are primarily numeric transformations. The page does not show any of the syntax for creating or accessing arrays or composite data types. For example not even () indexing is shown there, and not [] or {} construction or indexing either.
I don't know why they made that choice.
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