What does the C++ standard say about using dollar signs in identifiers, such as Hello$World? Are they legal?
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A c++ identifier can be composed of any of the following: _ (underscore), the digits 0-9, the letters a-z (both upper and lower case) and cannot start with a number. There are a number of exceptions as C99 allows extensions to the standard (e.g. visual studio). |
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They are illegal. The only legal characters in identifiers are letters, numbers, and _. Identifiers also cannot start with numbers. |
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Not legal, but many if not most of compilers support them, note this may depend on platform, thus gcc on arm does not support them due to assembly restrictions. |
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Illegal. I think the dollar sign and backtick are the only punctuation marks on my keyboard that aren't used in C++ somewhere (the "%" sign is in format strings, which are in C++ by reference to the C standard). |
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The relevant section is "2.8 Identifiers [lex.name]". From the basic character set, the only valid characters are A-Z a-z 0-9 and _. However, characters like é (U+00E9) are also allowed. Depending on your compiler, you might need to enter é as \u00e9, though. |
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In C++03, the given answers are correct. In C++11 the situation changed however: The answer here is "Maybe": But: I wouldn't use them. Make identifiers as readable and portable as possible. |
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They are not legal in C++. However some C/C++ derived languages (such as Java and JavaScript) do allow them. |
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