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As we all know, the legal identifiers in java are those identifiers which must start with a letter, a currency character ($) or a connecting character such as underscore(_).

And identifiers can not start with numbers and other like, (":", "-", "e#", ".f", etc.)

So my question is that why java restrict these keywords as an illegal identifiers.

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    Because those characters already have other meanings in the language?
    – JJJ
    Oct 19, 2014 at 8:57
  • Juhana, i don't think so, lets see this variable declaration, Oct 19, 2014 at 8:59
  • <code>int :a;</code> Oct 19, 2014 at 9:01
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    : are used within the enhanced for loop, - is subtraction, . Is used to access members. Think of all the places a variable could be used not just its declaration Oct 19, 2014 at 9:01
  • @Juhana yes. your answer very helpful for me to understand difference between illegal and legal identifiers. Thanks. Oct 19, 2014 at 9:09

1 Answer 1

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The reason is that you want to make parsing the language easier, and to prevent ambiguous situations. Let's assume you could call a variable "-velocity" instead of "negative_velocity". Now what does this term mean?

h = foo - -velocity

Is this subtracting the negative velocity from foo, or is it negating velocity, and then subtracting it from foo? The same goes for other characters, e.g. the point for being both used as attribute access operator (foo.bar) and part of floating points (.78). The list continues.

You could allow all this, but then you'd have to have a multi-stage parsing process where you have to parse the source once for identifier-declarations, and then parse it again, to try & find out where they are used. With this you could also end up in a situation where you - through an import - invalidate existing code that till then has been unambiguous, but now e.g. declares "-velocity" as identifier, and then the above expression is ambiguous.

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