From 06b5904e470b5295a6f09b6f85f21cb8172e13be Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Marshall Lochbaum Date: Fri, 6 Aug 2021 14:08:49 -0400 Subject: class -> role in a few places --- spec/grammar.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'spec') diff --git a/spec/grammar.md b/spec/grammar.md index 6ce8e8e2..64c607bf 100644 --- a/spec/grammar.md +++ b/spec/grammar.md @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ BQN's grammar is given below. Terms are defined in a [BNF](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backus%E2%80%93Naur_form) variant. However, handling special names properly is possible but difficult in BNF, so they are explained in text along with the braced block grammar. -The symbols `s`, `F`, `_m`, and `_c_` are identifier tokens with subject, function, 1-modifier, and 2-modifier classes respectively. Similarly, `sl`, `Fl`, `_ml`, and `_cl_` refer to literals and primitives of those classes. While names in the BNF here follow the identifier naming scheme, this is informative only: syntactic classes are no longer used after parsing and cannot be inspected in a running program. +The symbols `s`, `F`, `_m`, and `_c_` are identifier tokens with subject, function, 1-modifier, and 2-modifier classes respectively. Similarly, `sl`, `Fl`, `_ml`, and `_cl_` refer to literals and primitives of those classes. While names in the BNF here follow the identifier naming scheme, this is informative only: syntactic roles are no longer used after parsing and cannot be inspected in a running program. A program is a list of statements. Almost all statements are expressions. Namespace export statements, and valueless results stemming from `·`, or `𝕨` in a monadic brace function, can be used as statements but not expressions. -- cgit v1.2.3