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I'm working on a Java source code parser, following the lexical and syntactic specifications.

I'm stuck on annotations, though; the relevant rules are:

Annotation:
    @ QualifiedIdentifier [ ( [AnnotationElement] ) ]

AnnotationTypeDeclaration:
    @ interface Identifier AnnotationTypeBody

but I don't see the @ symbol mentioned anywhere in the lexical spec. What is the correct rule for tokenizing @, or where can I find such a rule?

I realize that I could easily add a token definition for this, and it might even work --- sometimes. But I'd prefer to do it correctly according to the spec if possible.

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  • Interesting! Those rules imply that @ SomeAnnotation public @ interface Foo { } is valid and indeed the compiler doesn't seem to complain about the added whitespace. So it looks like @ is treated like a separate token (even 'though it's usually formatted with no whitespace between it and the next token). Nov 16, 2012 at 14:27

2 Answers 2

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In 9.6. Annotation Types , it says:

Note that the at-sign (@) and the keyword interface are two distinct tokens. Technically it is possible to separate them with whitespace, but this is discouraged as a matter of style.

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  • Just what I was looking for, thanks. Would the obvious way -- a new token that's just @ -- be the correct way to implement this token? Nov 16, 2012 at 14:53
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You are correct, in the sense that '@' is not mentioned as either an operator or as punctuation in the "3. Lexical Structure" section of the JLS.

However, it is used as a symbol in the JLS 9.6, and also the "18. Collected Syntax" section, so it is obvious that your lexer should treat it as one.

This is just a minor editorial issue, and not something that should cause you any concern in implementing a Java parser.

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