From Handwiki In programming language theory, the qualification principle states that any semantically meaningful syntactic class may admit local definitions. In other words, it's possible to include a block in any syntactic class, provided that the phrases of that class specify some kind of computation. (Watt 1990) A common examples for of this principle includes:
tmp variable declared is local to the surrounding block command:if (a > b) {
int tmp;
tmp = a;
a = b;
b = tmp;
}
g can be used only during evaluation of the following expression:let
val g = 9.8
in
m * g * h
end
leap, using an auxiliary function multiple:local
fun multiple (n: int, d: int) =
(n mod d = 0)
in
fun leap (y: int) =
(multiple (y,4)
andalso not multiple (y, 100))
orelse multiple (y,400)
end
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Categories: [Programming language theory]