Unicode variable names: Difference between revisions

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syntax highlighting fixup automation
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{{trans|Python}}
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="11l">V Δx = 1
Δx++
print(Δx)</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
{{out}}
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-- [http://8th-dev.com/local.html Writing localized applications with 8th]
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="forth">
1 var, Δ
 
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الوداع
 
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|ACL2}}==
Variables in ACL2 cannot be modified in place.
<langsyntaxhighlight Lisplang="lisp">(let ((Δ 1))
(1+ Δ))</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Ada}}==
As of Ada 2005, all source code can be made of up to 32bit characters.
Unless you have made it a default, GNAT would require the -gnatW8 flag to understand you are using UTF8 for the code below, other encodings are possible.
<langsyntaxhighlight Adalang="ada">with Ada.Text_IO;
procedure main is
Δ : Integer;
Line 72:
Δ := Δ + 1;
Ada.Text_IO.Put_Line (Δ'Img);
end main;</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre> 42</pre>
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In AppleScript, identifiers whose first and last characters are vertical bars (|) can contain any characters. The AppleScript Language Guide doesn't recommend their use as they can make scripts difficult to read, but they're perfectly legal.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="applescript">set |Δ| to 1
set |Δ| to |Δ| + 1
return |Δ|</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
{{output}}
<syntaxhighlight lang ="applescript">2</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Vertical bars can also be used to differentiate between identifiers and reserved words should the need arise. The bars are just a signal to the compiler to accept what's between them as an identifier and aren't stored with the identifier itself. They may disappear once the code's compiled if the decompiler can't see a reason to include them. Or indeed they may be added if a script compiled on one machine is decompiled on another where one of the identifiers clashes with a term defined in a library or OSAX installed on that machine.
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However, you can set/get a variable with any name defined as a Unicode string, using the functions <code>let</code> (or its alias <code>:</code>) and <code>var</code>.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="rebol">"Δ": 1
"Δ": inc var "Δ"
 
print ["Delta =>" var "Δ"]</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
{{out}}
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Documentation: http://www.autohotkey.net/~Lexikos/AutoHotkey_L/docs/Variables.htm
{{works with|AutoHotkey_L}}
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ahk">Δ = 1
Δ++
MsgBox, % Δ</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|BaCon}}==
This is a port from the C example. As mentioned there, C has limited support for Unicode variable names which is specified in the C standard, and BaCon, being a Basic-to-C converter, therefore has the same restrictions. The below example works with the CLang compiler.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="qbasic">PRAGMA COMPILER clang
 
DECLARE Δ TYPE int
Line 151:
INCR Δ
 
PRINT Δ</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
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=={{header|Bracmat}}==
Bracmat allows any sequence of non-zero bytes as symbol and therefore, as variable name. Even the empty string is a variable, though a special one. If a symbol/variable name contains characters that have special meaning (operators, prefixes, parentheses, braces and the semicolon) it may be necessary to enclose it in quotes. Other special characters must be escaped C-style. See bracmat.html in the git-repo. The example below requires a terminal that supports UTF-8 encoded characters.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="bracmat">( (Δ=1)
& 1+!Δ:?Δ
& out$("Δ:" !Δ)
);</langsyntaxhighlight>
Output:
<pre>Δ: 2</pre>
Line 177:
Most modern compilers, as of 2020, support raw Unicode identifiers, given the file is encoded properly (typically UTF-8).
 
<langsyntaxhighlight Clang="c">// Works for clang and GCC 10+
#include<stdio.h>
 
Line 185:
printf("%d",Δ);
return 0;
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
Output:
<pre>
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=={{header|C sharp|C#}}==
Section 2.4.2 of the [http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=199552 C# Language Specification] gives rules for identifiers. They correspond exactly to those recommended by the [http://unicode.org/reports/tr31/ Unicode Standard Annex 31], except that underscore is allowed as an initial character (as is traditional in the C programming language), Unicode escape sequences are permitted in identifiers, and the "@" character is allowed as a prefix to enable keywords to be used as identifiers.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="csharp">class Program
{
static void Main()
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System.Console.WriteLine(Δ);
}
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
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That being said, it is not currently enforced, so while you probably shouldn't, you technically can.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="clojure">(let [Δ 1]
(inc Δ))</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
 
=={{header|Common Lisp}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="lisp">(let ((Δ 1))
(incf Δ))</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
 
=={{header|Crystal}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="crystal">Δ = 1
Δ += 1
puts Δ</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
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=={{header|D}}==
D source files support four character encodings: ASCII, UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="d">import std.stdio;
 
void main() {
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Δ++;
writeln(Δ);
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
Line 254:
=={{header|Delphi}}==
For more information about naming identifiers (including variables) visit: [http://docwiki.embarcadero.com/RADStudio/en/Identifiers Identifiers in Delphi]
<langsyntaxhighlight Delphilang="delphi">(* Compiled with Delphi XE *)
program UnicodeVariableName;
 
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Writeln(Δ);
Readln;
end.</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|DWScript}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight Delphilang="delphi">var Δ : Integer;
 
Δ := 1;
Inc(Δ);
PrintLn(Δ);</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Déjà Vu}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="dejavu">set :Δ 1
set :Δ ++ Δ
!. Δ</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|EchoLisp}}==
Symbol names can be any string including unicode characters. See the EchoLisp [http://www.echolalie.org/echolisp/help.html#language reference] documentation.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="lisp">
(define ∆-🍒 1) → ∆-🍒
(set! ∆-🍒 (1+ ∆-🍒)) → 2
(printf "🔦 Look at ∆-🍒 : %d" ∆-🍒)
🔦 Look at ∆-🍒 : 2
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Elena}}==
ELENA 4.x:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="elena">public program()
{
var Δ := 1;
Line 301:
console.writeLine:Δ
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Emacs Lisp}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight Lisplang="lisp">(setq Δ 1)
(setq Δ (1+ Δ))
(message "Δ is %d" Δ)</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Variables are symbols and symbol names can be any string. Source code <code>.el</code> files can have all usual Emacs coding system specifications to give variables in non-ASCII.
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=={{header|F_Sharp|F#}}==
As with C# the [http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/cambridge/projects/fsharp/manual/spec.html#_Toc207705761 F# Language Specification] refers to [http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr31/#Default_Identifier_Syntax Unicode Standard Annex #31] for identifier syntax, allowing Unicode letter characters.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="fsharp">let mutable Δ = 1
Δ <- Δ + 1
printfn "%d" Δ</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Factor}}==
Variable names can contain any character, inlcuding unicode characters, as long as they don't parse as a string or a number.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="factor">USE: locals
[let
1 :> Δ!
Δ 1 + Δ!
Δ .
]</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Forth}}==
Historically, Forth has worked only in ASCII (going so far as to reserve the eighth bit for symbol smudging), but modern implementations (e.g., Gforth) allow UTF-8 in word names, strings and comments.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="forth">variable ∆
1 ∆ !
1 ∆ +!
∆ @ .</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|FreeBASIC}}==
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If one wanted to use a Greek character such as Δ for a variable name, it would therefore have to be spelled out :
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="freebasic">'FB 1.05.0 Win64
 
Var delta = 1
delta += 1
Print delta '' 2
Sleep</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Frink}}==
Frink can use Unicode variable names that meet certain constraints. Variable names that don't meet these constraints can still be parsed and displayed by specifying them as Unicode escapes: [https://frinklang.org/#UnicodeInFrink Unicode Variable Names]
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="frink">
Δ = 1
Δ = Δ + 1
println[Δ]
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Go}}==
Go source encoding is [http://golang.org/doc/go_spec.html#Source_code_representation specified] to be UTF-8. Allowable variable names are specified in the sections [http://golang.org/doc/go_spec.html#Identifiers identifiers] and [http://golang.org/doc/go_spec.html#Exported_identifiers Exported identifiers].
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="go">package main
 
import "fmt"
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Δ++
fmt.Println(Δ)
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
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Also, Haskell does not allow mutable variables, so incrementing delta isn't possible. Instead lower case psi was used to store the incremented value of delta since tridents are cool.
<langsyntaxhighlight Haskelllang="haskell">main = print ψ
where δΔ = 1
ψ = δΔ + 1</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|J}}==
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=={{header|Java}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="java">int Δ = 1;
double π = 3.141592;
String 你好 = "hello";
Δ++;
System.out.println(Δ);</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 406:
 
=={{header|JavaScript}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="javascript">var ᾩ = "something";
var ĦĔĽĻŎ = "hello";
var 〱〱〱〱 = "too less";
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var KingGeorgeⅦ = "Roman numerals.";
 
console.log([ᾩ, ĦĔĽĻŎ, 〱〱〱〱, जावास्क्रिप्ट, KingGeorgeⅦ])</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
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However, in practice, the keys of JSON objects can also be used as variable names. For example, in the following expression, "Δ" is in effect set to 1 and then its value is retrieved in the environment in which "Δ" has been set:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="jq">{ "Δ": 1 } | .["Δ"]</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
In jq 1.5 and later, <langsyntaxhighlight lang="jq">.["Δ"]</langsyntaxhighlight> can be abbreviated to <langsyntaxhighlight lang="jq">."Δ"</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Strictly speaking, variables in jq cannot be incremented (in fact, strictly speaking, jq does not have variables at all), but the equivalent operation is illustrated here:
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="jq">{ "Δ": 1 } # initialization
| .["Δ"] += 1 # increment by 1
| .["Δ"] # emit the incremented value</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Julia}}==
The Julia documentation on
[http://docs.julialang.org/en/latest/manual/variables/#allowed-variable-names allowed variable names] explicitly describes the wide variety of Unicode codepoints that are allowed:
<langsyntaxhighlight Julialang="julia">julia> Δ = 1 ; Δ += 1 ; Δ
2</langsyntaxhighlight>
The allowed identifiers also include sub/superscripts and combining characters (e.g. accent marks):
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="julia">julia> Δ̂₂ = Δ^2
4</langsyntaxhighlight>
and the Julia interactive shells (and many editors) allow typing these symbols via tab-completion of their LaTeX abbreviations.
 
=={{header|Kotlin}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="scala">fun main(args: Array<String>) {
var Δ = 1
Δ++
print(Δ)
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
{{out}}
Line 455:
 
=={{header|Lily}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight Lilylang="lily">var Δ = 1
Δ += 1
print(Δ.to_s())</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Lingo}}==
Since version 11, in Lingo/Director both native strings and scripts use UTF-8 encoding. Variable names support Unicode characters:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="lingo">Δ = 1
Δ = Δ + 1
put Δ
-- 2</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|LiveCode}}==
In LiveCode 7+ all characters are stored as unicode. This includes variable (container) names, although it does not seem to state this in the LC dictionary.
<langsyntaxhighlight LiveCodelang="livecode">put 1 into Δ
add 1 to Δ
put Δ
-- result is 2</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|LOLCODE}}==
The [http://lolcode.com/specs/1.2#variables spec] mandates that identifiers be alphanumeric. However, the fact that [http://lolcode.com/specs/1.2#strings YARNs] are Unicode-aware permits the use of the [http://lolcode.com/proposals/1.3/bukkit2#srs-serious-cast SRS operator] introduced in 1.3 to utilize variables of arbitrary name.
<langsyntaxhighlight LOLCODElang="lolcode">I HAS A SRS "Δ" ITZ 1
SRS "Δ" R SUM OF SRS ":(394)" AN 1
VISIBLE SRS ":[GREEK CAPITAL LETTER DELTA]"</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
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Lua 5.3 supports UTF-8 encoding as documented here: https://www.lua.org/manual/5.3/manual.html#6.5 .
However, this support is not strictly necessary for this task so long as the Lua script is edited using a UTF-8 enabled text editor.
<langsyntaxhighlight Lualang="lua">∆ = 1
∆ = ∆ + 1
print(∆)</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
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The language has Greek statements too
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="m2000 interpreter">
<lang M2000 Interpreter>
Δ=1
Δ++
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c͓͈̃͂̋̈̆̽h̥̪͕ͣ͛̊aͨͣ̍͞ơ̱͔̖͖̑̽ș̻̥ͬ̃̈ͩ =100 : Print "c͓͈̃͂̋̈̆̽h̥̪͕ͣ͛̊aͨͣ̍͞ơ̱͔̖͖̑̽ș̻̥ͬ̃̈ͩ ="; c͓͈̃͂̋̈̆̽h̥̪͕ͣ͛̊aͨͣ̍͞ơ̱͔̖͖̑̽ș̻̥ͬ̃̈ͩ
 
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Mathematica}}/{{header|Wolfram Language}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight Mathematicalang="mathematica">Δ = 1;
Δ++;
Print[Δ]</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Nemerle}}==
From the Nemerle [http://nemerle.org/wiki/index.php?title=Lexical_structure_%28ref%29 Reference Manual]: "Programs are written using the Unicode character set, using the UTF-8 encoding."
<langsyntaxhighlight Nemerlelang="nemerle">using System.Console;
 
module UnicodeVar
Line 532:
WriteLine($"Δ = $Δ");
}
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|NetRexx}}==
The ''NetRexx Language Definition'' section of the NetRexx documentation ([http://netrexx.org/files/nrl3.pdf netrexx.org/files/nrl3.pdf]) describes the character set support within the language.
<langsyntaxhighlight NetRexxlang="netrexx">/* NetRexx */
options replace format comments java crossref symbols nobinary
 
Line 569:
 
return
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
'''Output:'''
<pre>
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From the spec: https://nim-lang.org/docs/manual.html#lexical-analysis-identifiers-amp-keywords
 
<langsyntaxhighlight Nimrodlang="nimrod">var Δ = 1
inc Δ
echo Δ</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Objeck}}==
As of 3.2, Objeck supports UTF-8 encoded I/O and stores characters in the runtime's native Unicode format.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="objeck">
class Test {
function : Main(args : String[]) ~ Nil {
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}
}
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Ol}}==
Ol fully supports Unicode.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="scheme">
(define Δ 1)
(define Δ (+ Δ 1))
(print Δ)
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
{{out}}
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2.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="sgml"><@ LETVARLIT>Δ|1</@>
<@ ACTICRVAR>Δ</@>
<@ SAYVAR>Δ</@></langsyntaxhighlight>
Using what Google Translate says is the Traditional Chinese for 'delta'
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="sgml"><@ LETVARLIT>三角洲|1</@>
<@ ACTICRVAR>三角洲</@>
<@ SAYVAR>三角洲</@></langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Perl}}==
Requires Perl 5.8.1 at the minimum. See http://perldoc.perl.org/utf8.html
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="perl">use utf8;
 
my $Δ = 1;
$Δ++;
print $Δ, "\n";</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
<code>$</code> sigil can be omitted by using [http://perldoc.perl.org/perlsub.html#Lvalue-subroutines lvalue] subroutine:
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="perl">use utf8;
 
BEGIN {
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Δ = 1;
Δ++;
print Δ, "\n";</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
or with Perl 5.10 and [http://perldoc.perl.org/functions/state.html state] modifier:
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="perl">use utf8;
use v5.10;
 
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Δ = 1;
Δ++;
say Δ;</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
One can have Unicode in identifier or subroutine names and also in package or class names. Use of Unicode for the last two purposes is, due to file and directory names, dependent on the filesystem.
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=={{header|Phix}}==
Phix does not officially support unicode variable names, however it took me less than 5 minutes (changes, which are now permanent, labelled with "for rosettacode/unicode" in ptok.e and pttree.e, setting charset and identset respectively) to get the following to work, as long as the source file is stored using utf8 with a proper BOM, as supported by Notepad and the included Edita. I will happily add further character ranges as required/requested: I simply don't know what those ranges are, but I believe that no code points in utf8 should overlap existing ascii chars such as +-* etc.
<!--<langsyntaxhighlight Phixlang="phix">(phixonline)-->
<span style="color: #008080;">with</span> <span style="color: #008080;">javascript_semantics</span>
<span style="color: #004080;">integer</span> <span style="color: #000000;">Δ</span> <span style="color: #0000FF;">=</span> <span style="color: #000000;">1</span>
<span style="color: #000000;">Δ</span> <span style="color: #0000FF;">+=</span> <span style="color: #000000;">1</span>
<span style="color: #0000FF;">?</span><span style="color: #000000;">Δ</span>
<!--</langsyntaxhighlight>-->
{{out}}
<pre>
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Documentation: [http://php.net/manual/en/mbstring.php4.req.php mbstring.php4.req], [http://php.net/manual/en/language.variables.basics.php language.variables.basics]
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="php"><?php
$Δ = 1;
++$Δ;
echo $Δ;</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|PicoLisp}}==
Variables are usually [http://software-lab.de/doc/ref.html#internal-io Internal Symbols], and their names may contain any UTF-8 character except null-bytes. White space, and 11 special characters (see the reference) must be escaped with a backslash. [http://software-lab.de/doc/ref.html#transient-io Transient Symbols] are often used as variables too, they follow the syntax of strings in other languages.
<langsyntaxhighlight PicoLisplang="picolisp">: (setq Δ 1)
-> 1
: Δ
Line 706:
-> 2
: Δ
-> 2</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Pike}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="pike">
<lang Pike>
#charset utf8
void main()
Line 717:
write( Δ +"\n");
}
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
{{Out}}
<pre>
Line 724:
 
=={{header|PowerShell}}==
<syntaxhighlight lang="powershell">
<lang PowerShell>
$Δ = 2
$π = 3.14
$π*$Δ
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
<b>Output:</b>
<pre>
Line 735:
 
=={{header|Prolog}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="prolog">% Unicode in predicate names:
是. % be: means, approximately, "True".
不是 :- \+ 是. % not be: means, approximately, "False". Defined as not 是.
Line 745:
 
% Call test2(1, Result) to have 2 assigned to Result.
test2(Δ, R) :- R is Δ + 1.</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Putting this into use:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="prolog">?- 是.
true.
 
Line 759:
 
?- test2(1,Result).
Result = 2.</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Python}}==
Line 767:
 
Identifiers are unlimited in length. Case is significant.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="python">>>> Δx = 1
>>> Δx += 1
>>> print(Δx)
2
>>> </langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|R}}==
See <code>?assign</code> for details.
 
<langsyntaxhighlight Rspluslang="rsplus">f <- function(`∆`=1) `∆`+1
 
f(1)</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>[1] 2</pre>
Line 786:
Racket has virtually no restrictions on valid characters for identifiers. In particular, Unicode identifiers are supported.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="racket">
<lang Racket>
#lang racket
 
Line 800:
(printf "Δ = ~s\n" Δ) ; prints "Δ = 2"
 
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
 
=={{header|Raku}}==
Line 807:
 
See the current Raku documentation on the topic here: https://docs.raku.org/language/syntax#Identifiers
<syntaxhighlight lang="raku" perl6line>my $Δ = 1;
$Δ++;
say $Δ;</langsyntaxhighlight>
Function and subroutine names can also use Unicode characters: (as can methods, classes, packages, whatever...)
<syntaxhighlight lang="raku" perl6line>my @ᐁ = (0, 45, 60, 90);
 
sub π { pi };
Line 819:
for @ᐁ -> $ಠ_ಠ { say sin $ಠ_ಠ° };
 
sub c͓͈̃͂̋̈̆̽h̥̪͕ͣ͛̊aͨͣ̍͞ơ̱͔̖͖̑̽ș̻̥ͬ̃̈ͩ { 'HE COMES' }</langsyntaxhighlight>
<br>
 
Line 826:
 
=={{header|Retro}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight Retrolang="retro">'Δ var
#1 !Δ
@Δ n:put
&Δ v:inc
@Δ n:put</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
Function and variable names are stored as strings, and UTF-8 is usable, as long as the host system allows it.
Line 842:
 
This REXX program works because the &nbsp; '''R4''' &nbsp; and &nbsp; '''ROO''' &nbsp; REXX interpreters support an extended character set.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="rexx">/*REXX program (using the R4 REXX interpreter) which uses a Greek delta char).*/
'chcp' 1253 "> NUL" /*ensure we're using correct code page.*/
Δ=1 /*define delta (variable name Δ) to 1*/
Δ=Δ+1 /*bump the delta REXX variable by unity*/
say 'Δ=' Δ /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */</langsyntaxhighlight>
'''output'''
<pre>
Line 853:
 
=={{header|Ring}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ring">
# Project : Unicode variable names
 
Δ = "Ring Programming Language"
see Δ + nl
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
Output:
<pre>
Line 866:
=={{header|Ruby}}==
Ruby supports about 100 encodings, the default being UTF-8.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ruby">Δ = 1
Δ += 1
puts Δ # => 2</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Rust}}==
Line 875:
<b>Non-ASCII identifiers are [https://github.com/mozilla/rust/pull/10605 feature gated] since version 0.9</b>
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="rust">#![feature(non_ascii_idents)]
#![allow(non_snake_case)]
 
Line 882:
Δ += 1;
println!("{}", Δ);
}</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|S-lang}}==
Line 904:
not just in variable but also function and reference names, and tested under
S-Lang versions 2.0.6 and pre2.3.1-23.
<langsyntaxhighlight Slang="s-lang">define ∆increment(∆ref) {
@∆ref++;
}
Line 915:
print(foo∆bar);
print(∆bar);
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
{{out}}
2
Line 921:
 
=={{header|Scala}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="scala">var Δ = 1
val π = 3.141592
val 你好 = "hello"
Δ += 1
println(Δ)</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|SenseTalk}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="sensetalk">put 1 into Δ
add 1 to Δ
put Δ</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
 
=={{header|Sidef}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ruby">var Δ = 1;
Δ += 1;
say Δ;</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
Line 945:
Here is how to create a macro, a scalar and a Mata variable named Δ:
 
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="stata">sca Δ=10
sca Δ=Δ+1
di Δ
Line 957:
Δ++
Δ
end</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
=={{header|Swift}}==
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="swift">var Δ = 1
let π = 3.141592
let 你好 = "hello"
Δ++
println(Δ)</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
Line 972:
=={{header|Tcl}}==
Tcl variable names can include any character <!-- but the <tt>::</tt> sequence is special — it is the namespace separator — and there are restrictions when parentheses are involved, as they are used for associative arrays; these are not matters that are in the spirit of this task though, so this is a comment! --> (the <code>$var</code> syntax can't, but that's just a shorthand for the operationally-equivalent <code>[set var]</code>). Also (in tcl 8.6, at least), the <code>${var}</code> syntax does work. Thus, this script is entirely legal:
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="tcl">set Δx 1
incr Δx
puts [set Δx]
puts ${Δx}</langsyntaxhighlight>
However, this script only works smoothly if the “<tt>Δ</tt>” character is in the system's default encoding (thankfully more common than it used to be, as more and more systems use UTF-8 or UTF-16 as their default encodings) so normal Tcl practice is to stick to ASCII for identifier names.
 
Line 982:
=={{header|UNIX Shell}}==
{{works with|zsh}}
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="bash">
Δ=1
Δ=`expr $Δ + 1`
echo $Δ
</syntaxhighlight>
</lang>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
Line 999:
{{works with|Visual Basic|5}}
{{works with|Visual Basic|6}}
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="vb">Sub Main()
Dim Δ As Integer
Δ=1
Δ=Δ+1
Debug.Print Δ
End Sub</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>2</pre>
Line 1,014:
 
The error description refers to the bytes in the UTF encoding of 'Δ' which can't appear (outside a string) in a Wren script.
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="ecmascript">var a = 3
var b = 2
var delta = a - b // ok
var Δ = delta // not ok</langsyntaxhighlight>
 
{{out}}
Line 1,027:
=={{header|zkl}}==
The short answer is zkl identifiers are a small subset of ASCII. This is enforced by the compiler. That said, the VM doesn't particularly care about names (although UTF-8 will cause sorting/etc issues). So ...
<langsyntaxhighlight lang="zkl">delta:="\U0394;"; // UTF-8 delta
klass:= // embryo(names, numFcns, numClasses, numParents, ...)
self.embryo(L("","",delta),0,0,0).cook();
Line 1,035:
dv:=klass.setVar(0); // which actually gets the var, go figure
dv.inc(); // ie (*ptr)++
dv.value.println();</langsyntaxhighlight>
{{out}}
<pre>
10,327

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