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According to oracle doc underscores cannot be put at the beginning of a number which is just fine. But when it comes to Octal Number we can put underscores at the beginning. Isn't it weird?

int x1 = 0x_52;            // Invalid; cannot put underscores at the beginning of a number
int x2 = 0_52;             // OK (octal literal)
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The rule is that:

Underscores are allowed as separators between digits that denote the integer.

There is a difference in what constitutes the digits that denote the integer when it comes to literals with a radix prefix, for hex/binary:

... the integer is only denoted by the digits after the 0x or 0b characters and before any type suffix. Therefore, underscores may not appear immediately after 0x or 0b, or after the last digit in the numeral.

Howerver for Octal the rules are different:

In a decimal or octal literal, the integer is denoted by all the digits in the literal before any type suffix. Therefore, underscores may not appear before the first digit or after the last digit in the numeral. Underscores may appear after the initial 0 in an octal numeral (since 0 is a digit that denotes part of the integer) and after the initial non-zero digit in a non-zero decimal literal.

Ref: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jls/se8/html/jls-3.html#jls-3.10.1

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