Network Working Group                                          R. Winter
Request for Comments: 515                Computer Corporation of America
NIC 16446                                                    6 June 1973


             Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9

Preface

  Datalanguage is the language processed by the Datacomputer, a data
  utility system being developed for the Arpanet.  The Datacomputer
  performs data storage and data management functions for the benefit
  of computers on the network.

  Version 0/9 is currently running at CCA.  This version is extremely
  primitive; however, it does offer an opportunity for experience with
  the Datacomputer and with fundamental Datalanguage concepts.

  Subsequent versions will provide greater portions of the full
  Datalanguage capability, which has been described earlier
  (Datalanguage, Working Paper No. 3, Datacomputer Project, October,
  1971, NIC 8028).  For example, one of the primary restrictions in
  0/9--elementary data items must be fixed-length ASCII strings--will
  be eliminated in Version 0/10, which is currently being implemented.

  Based on the experience gained in the implementation of these early
  versions, and based on the feedback from their use, a revised
  specification of the full language will be issued.

1. Introduction

  This document presents a precise and complete specification of
  Datalanguage, Version 0/9.  It is organized into 11 sections, of
  which this introduction is the first.  Section 2 discusses the
  capabilities of Version 0/9 in general terms.  Sections 3 and 4 are
  concerned with data description and the directory.  Sections 5
  through 8 cover the expression of data management operations.
  Section 9 discusses the recognition of names.  Section 10 covers
  miscellaneous topics and Section 11 specifies the syntax in BNF.

  This specification is to be followed with a user manual, which will
  present the language in tutorial form and treat components of the
  Datacomputer-user interface other than the language.








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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


2. Capabilities of Version 0/9

  Version 0/9 of Datalanguage has capabilities for the storage of
  files; for addition of data to existing files, and for the deletion
  of files.  Retrievals can output whole files as well as subsets of
  files.  Data can be selected from files by content, using expressions
  formed from boolean and inequality operators.

  At the option of the file creator, an inversion is constructed and
  maintained by the Datacomputer.  The inversion increases the
  efficiency of selective retrieval, at the cost of storage space and
  file maintenance effort.  Users other than the file creator need not
  be aware of the existence of the inversion, or of which fields are
  inverted file keys.  The language is designed so that they state the
  desired result of a retrieval, and the Datacomputer uses the
  inversion as much as the request permits.

  Elementary data items are fixed-length ASCII strings.  Files are a
  restricted class of hierarchical structures.

  Many of the restrictions mentioned in this memo will be short-lived.
  In particular, those statements followed with 3 asterisks (***) refer
  to restrictions that will be considerably weakened or eliminated
  entirely in the next version of the software.

3. Data Description

  A container is a variable whose value is a data object of general
  character and arbitrary size (In Version 0/9, size is restricted.
  See section 3.4).  Examples of containers which are implemented in
  other systems are files, records, fields, groups, and entries.

  The container is distinct from the data in the container.  For
  example, space allocation is an operation on a container, while
  changing the unit price field from 25 to 50 is an operation on data
  in a container.

  A container may enclose other containers.  When a container is not
  enclosed by another container, it is said to be outermost.  If
  container A encloses container B, and no other container in A also
  encloses B, then A immediately encloses B.

  A Datalanguage description is a statement of the properties of a
  container.

  All containers have the attributes ident and type.  Ident is a
  character string by which users refer to the container.  Type
  determines the form of the container's value; the value can be



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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


  elementary, or it can consist of other containers.  There are 3
  types: LIST, STRUCT, and STRING(***).  A LIST contains a group of
  containers having the same description.  A STRUCT contains a group of
  containers, each of which has its own description.  A STRING is a
  sequence of ASCII characters.  While a STRING is not really an
  elementary item, it is handled as one in Version 0/9.

  Certain containers can have other attributes.  An outermost container
  has a function.  The function attribute specifies whether the
  container is to be used for storage or for transmission.

  Size is some meaningful dimension of the container, which is type-
  dependent.  It is used for space allocation and data stream parsing.

  An aggregate container (i.e., one that contains other containers) has
  as an attribute the description or descriptions of its components.
  Thus if S is a STRUCT containing A, B, and C, then the descriptions
  of A, B, and C are attributes of S.

  A STRING defined in certain contexts can have an inversion attribute.
  This is an access property that is not really local to the STRING,
  but is associated with it for convenience.

3.1 Ident

     The ident of a container is composed of alphanumeric characters,
     the first of which is alphabetic.  It may not consist of more than
     100 characters.

     The elements of a STRUCT must have idents unique in the STRUCT.

3.2 Function

     The function of a container is either FILE, PORT, or TEMPORARY
     PORT.  When the function is FILE, then the container is used for
     storage of data at the Datacomputer.  When the function is PORT,
     then the container is used for transmission of data into or out of
     the Datacomputer.  When the function is TEMPORARY PORT (which may
     be abbreviated TEMP PORT), the container behaves like a PORT;
     however, its description is not retained in the Datacomputer
     beyond the session in which it is created.










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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


3.3 Type

     Type is one of: LIST, STRUCT, or STRING.  These are defined on the
     preceding page.

     In an occurrence of a STRUCT, the elements appear in the order in
     which their descriptions appear in the STRUCT description.  All
     elements are present in each occurrence of the STRUCT.

     An element of a STRUCT or LIST can be a container of any datatype.
     However, the outermost container must be a LIST(***).

3.4 Size

     The size of a STRING is the number of characters in it.  The size
     of a STRUCT is not defined (***).  The meaning of the size of a
     LIST depends upon other properties of the LIST (***).

     Ordinarily, the size of a LIST is the number of LIST-members.  An
     exception is the case of the outermost-LIST.  In an outermost-LIST
     with a function of FILE, the size is the number of LIST-members
     for which space should be allocated.  When no size is present in
     this case, the system computes a default.  In an outermost-LIST
     with a function of PORT, the size is ignored (***).

     Only outermost containers may be larger than a TENEX page (2560
     ASCII characters)(***).

3.5 Inversion

     An inversion is an auxiliary data structure used to facilitate
     retrieval by content.

     Its basic application is the fast retrieval of sets of outermost-
     LIST-members (this can be extended to other container sets, and
     will be after release 1).  Consider a list of weather
     observations, stored as a file on the Datacomputer.  If quick
     retrieval of observations by COUNTRY is desired, then this is
     indicated in the description of the COUNTRY container.  According
     to common usage in information retrieval, this makes COUNTRY a key
     in the retrieval of observations.

     Note that the inversion option only affects the efficiency of
     retrieval by COUNTRY, not the ability to retrieve by COUNTRY.







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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     There are restrictions on use of the inversion option.  First, it
     can be applied only to STRINGs.  Second a STRING having the
     inversion option must occur only once in each
     outermost-LIST-member.  Third, it is ignored when applied to
     STRINGs in PORT descriptions.

     Eventually there will be several types of inversion option; in
     Version 0/9 there is only the 'D' option (for distinct).

3.6 Syntax

     The description is simply an enumeration of properties; these
     properties are specified in the order:

           <ident> <function> <type> <size> <other>

     Properties which do not apply are omitted.  An example:

           F FILE LIST (25) A STR (10)

     Here 'F' is the <ident>, 'FILE' is the <function>, 'LIST' is the
     <type>, '(25)' is the size, and 'A STR (10)' is the <other> of one
     description.  Of course, 'A STR (10)' is itself another
     description: the description for members of the LIST named F.

     An example of a complete description for a file of weather
     observations keyed on location:

           WEATHER FILE LIST
           OBSERVATION STRUCT
                LOCATION STRUCT
                      CITY STR (10), I=D
                      COUNTRY STR (10), I=D
                      END
                TIME STRUCT
                      YEAR STR (2)
                      DAY STR (3)
                      HOUR STR (2)
                      END
                DATE STRUCT
                      TEMPERATURE STR (3)
                      RAINFALL STR (3)
                      HUMIDITY STR (2)
                      END
                END
     The ENDs are needed to delimit the list of elements of a STRUCT.
     `, I=D' indicates that the string is to be an inversion key for
     the retrieval of outermost-LIST-members.



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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


4. Directory

  The directory is a system file in which the names and descriptions of
  all user-defined containers are kept.

  The directory is structured as a tree.  Each node has an ident, which
  need not be unique.  There is a single path from the root of the tree
  to any node.  The idents of the nodes along this path are
  concatenated, separated by periods, to form a pathname, which
  unambiguously identifies the node (e.g., A.B.C could be a pathname
  for node with an ident of C).

  In a later version of the software, the directory will be generalized
  to provide for links between nodes, so that it will not properly be a
  tree.  For now, however, the tree model is convenient and adequate.

  A node may represent a container, or it may simply hold a place in
  the space of pathnames.  When it represents a container, it cannot
  (currently) have subordinate nodes.

  Eventually, it is planned to model the directory as a structure of
  containers, with its description distributed throughout the
  structure.  Most operations defined on the directory will be defined
  on user data, and vice versa.  Access privileges and privacy locks
  will be part of the data description and will likewise be applicable
  both to directory nodes and data structures below the node level.

4.1 CREATE

     A CREATE-request either; (a) adds a node to the directory,
     optionally associating the description of either a PORT or a FILE
     with the node, or (b) creates a temporary container which is not
     entered in the directory, but has a description and can be
     referenced in requests.  If the description defines a file, CREATE
     causes space to be allocated for the file.

     To create a node with a description:
          CREATE <pathname> <description> ;
     To create a node with no description:
          CREATE <pathname> ;
     Note that the description determines whether or not the container
     is temporary (see section 3.2 for details).









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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     A CREATE-request adds a single node to the directory.  Thus to add
     CCA.RAW.F to an empty directory, three requests are needed:
          CREATE CCA ;
          CREATE CCA.RAW ;
          CREATE CCA.RAW.F ;
     Notice that the last ident of the pathname doubles as the first
     ident of the description:
          CREATE CCA.RAW.G FILE LIST A STR (5) ;

     That is, G is both the ident of a node and the ident of an
     outermost container of type LIST.

4.2 DELETE

     A DELETE-request deletes a tree of nodes and any associated
     descriptions or data.  The syntax is:
          DELETE <pathname> ;
     The named node and any subordinates are deleted.

     Note that to delete data while retaining the directory entry and
     description, DELETE should not be used (see section 6.3 for the
     proper method).

4.3 LIST

     The LIST-request is used to display system data of interest to a
     user.  It causes the data specified to be transmitted through the
     Datalanguage output port.

     Several arguments of LIST apply to the directory.  LIST %ALL
     transmits all pathnames in the directory.  LIST %ALL.%SOURCE
     transmits all descriptions in the directory.  Instead of %ALL, a
     pathname can be used:
          LIST <pn>.%ALL
     Lists pathnames subordinate to <pn>.
          LIST <pn>.%SOURCE
     lists descriptions subordinate to the node represented by <pn>.

     For details about the LIST-request, see section 10.1.

5. Opening and closing containers

  Containers must be open before they can be operated on.

  A container is open when it is first created.  It remains open until
  closed explicitly by a CLOSE-request or implicitly by a DELETE-
  request or by session end.




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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


  A closed container is opened by an OPEN-request.  A temporary
  container is always open; a CLOSE-request deletes it.

5.1 Modes

     An open container has a mode, which is one of: READ, WRITE, or
     APPEND.  The mode determines the meaning and/or legitimacy of
     certain operations on the container.

     The mode is established by the operation which opens the
     container.  It can be changed at any time by a MODE-request.  A
     CREATE leaves the container in WRITE mode.  An OPEN either
     specifies the mode explicitly or implicitly sets the mode to READ.

5.2 Syntax

     To open a container:
          OPEN <pathname> <mode> ;
     or:
          OPEN <pathname> ;
     where <mode> is defaulted to READ.

     To close a container:
          CLOSE <ident> ;
     where <ident> is the name of an outermost container.

     Two containers with the same outermost <ident> can not be
     opened at the same time (***).

     To change the mode of an open container:
          MODE <ident> <newmode> ;

5.3 LIST

     LIST %OPEN transmits name, mode and connection status of each open
     outermost container through the Datalanguage output port. (The
     Datalanguage output port is the destination to which all
     Datacomputer diagnostics and replies are sent.  It is established
     when the user initially connects to the Datacomputer.)  For
     details of the LIST-request, see section 10.1.

6. Assignment

  Assignment transfers data from one container to another.

  The equal sign ('=') is the symbol for assignment.  The value of the
  operand on the right of the equal sign is transferred to the operand
  on the left.  (Eventually, both operands will be weakly-restricted



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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


  Datalanguage expressions, which may evaluate to sets as well as to
  single containers.  Now, the left must be a container name, the right
  may be a container name or a constant.)

  Assignment is defined for all types of containers.  When the
  containers are aggregates, their elements are paired and data is
  transferred between paired elements.  Elements of the target
  container that do not pair with some source element are handled with
  a default operation (currently they are filled with blanks).

  The operands of an assignment must have descriptions that match.  The
  idea of matching is that the descriptions must be similar enough so
  that it is obvious how to map one into the other.

6.1 Conditions for legitimate assignment

     Assignment must reference objects, not sets.  An object is:
        (a)   an outermost container, or
        (b)   a constant, or
        (c)   in the body of a FOR-loop, either
              (c1) a member of a set defined by a FOR-OPERAND, or
              (c2) a container which occurs once in such a member

     In the case of a reference of type (c1), the object referenced is
     taken to be the current member.  In the case of (c2), the object
     referenced is that which occurs in the current member.  This is
     explained further in section 7.

     The left operand of an assignment is subject to further
     restriction.  If it is an outermost container, it must be open in
     either WRITE- or APPEND-mode.  If it is not an outermost
     container, then the reference is of type (c), which means that
     some FOR-operand has established a context in which the assign-
     operand is an object.  The FOR-operand which establishes this
     context must be the output-operand of the FOR.

     When the assign-operand is an outermost container, it must be
     open.  Such an operand must be referenced by its simple container
     ident(***), not its directory pathname.

     In the body of a loop nested in one or more other loops,
     assignments are further restricted, due to a 0/9 implementation
     problem.  See section 7.2 for details.








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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     Finally, the descriptions of the operands must match.  If one is a
     constant, then the other must be a STRING(***).  If both are
     containers, then in the expression:
        A = B;
     the descriptions of containers A and B match if:
     1. A and B have the same type
     2. If A and B are LISTs, then they have equal numbers of
        LIST-members, or else A is an outermost-LIST.
     3. If A and B are aggregates, then at least one container
     immediately enclosed in A matches, and has the same ident as, one
     container immediately enclosed in B.

6.2 Result of assignment

     If the operands are STRINGs, then the value of B, left-justified,
     replaces the value of A.  If B is longer than A, the value is
     truncated.  If B is shorter than A, then A is filled on the right
     with blanks as necessary.

     If the operands are STRUCTs, then assignment is defined in terms
     of the STRUCT members.  If a member of A, mA, matches and has the
     same name as a member of B, mB, then mB is assigned to mA.  If no
     such mB exists, then mA is filled with blanks.

     If the operands are LISTs, the result depends on several factors.
     First, notice that the descriptions of the LIST-members must
     match;  otherwise the assignment would not be legitimate by the
     matching rules of 6.1.

     If A is an outermost-LIST, then it can be in either of two modes:
     WRITE or APPEND.  If A is in WRITE-mode, its previous contents are
     first discarded; it is then handled as though it were in APPEND-
     mode.

     If A is not an outermost-LIST, then it is always effectively in
     WRITE-mode.

     After taking the mode of A into account, as described above, the
     procedure is:
        for each member of LIST B
        (a) add a new member to the end of A
        (b) assign the current number of B to the new member of A









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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


6.3 Deletion of Data Through Assignment

     If A is an outermost container in WRITE-mode, and B is a container
     with description that matches A, and if B contains no data, then
     A=B has the effect of deleting all data from A.  Note that if A is
     in APPEND-mode in these circumstances, then A=B is a no-operation
     (i.e., has no effect).

7. FOR

     FOR <output set spec>, <input set spec> <body> END ;

  The output set is optional: that is, FOR need not produce output.
  When the output set is omitted, the syntax is:

     FOR <input set spec> <body> END ;

  The operations specified in the body are performed once for each
  member of the input set.  References in the body to the input set
  member are treated as references to the current input set member.
  When an output set is present, a new member is created and added to
  the output set for each iteration (i.e., for each input set member).
  References to the output set member, similarly, are treated as
  references to the current output set member.

  The output set spec must be the name of a LIST member.  Each
  iteration of the FOR will create one such member, and add it to its
  LIST (hereafter called the output LIST).  The body terminates the
  value that the new member receives.  Any STRING in the new member
  which is not given a value by the body receives he default value of
  all blanks.

  The input set spec must be an expression evaluating to a set of
  LIST-members (see section 7.1 for details of input set
  specification).  Each iteration for the FOR will input one such
  member; the FOR will terminate when each member of the set has been
  processed.  The LIST from which the input set members are drawn is
  called the input LIST.

  FOR is effectively a means of accomplishing variants of assignment
  between a pair of LISTS.  FOR is less concise than assignment, but
  offers more flexibility.  Its advantages are:
     (a) not all the input LIST-members need be transferred to the
         output LIST.  A subset can be selected by content.
     (b) the user has explicit control over the assignment of values to
         output LIST-members.





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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


  This is most easily understood by an example:
      P PORT LIST               F FILE LIST
        R STRUCT                  R STRUCT
          B STR                     A STRUCT
          C STR                       A1 STR
          END                         A2 STR
                                    B STR
                                    C STR
                                    END

  (1)   P = F ;
  (2)   FOR P.R, F.R
              P.R = F.R ;
              END ;
  (3)   FOR P.R, F.R WITH A1 EQ 'XY' OR A2 GE 'AB'
              B = C ;
              C = A2 ;
              END

  Here, (1) and (2) are entirely equivalent requests.  However, (3) is
  quite different and is not expressible as assignment.  It selects a
  subset of F.Rs.  The values it gives to the P.Rs could not result
  from application of the matching rules to F and P.

  Because FOR is effectively assignment between a pair of LISTs, the
  LISTs referenced by a legitimate FOR-operation are largely subject to
  the same restrictions as LISTs referenced in an assignment.  One
  exception is that the descriptions of the LIST-members need not
  match.

  These restrictions are:
  (a)   both LISTs must be objects in the context in which the FOR
        appears.
  (b)   both LISTs must be open or contained in open outermost
        containers.
  (c)   if the output LIST is an outermost container, it must be in
        WRITE- or APPEND-mode.
  (d)   If the output LIST is not outermost, the LIST which most
        immediately encloses it must be the output LIST of an enclosing
        FOR.

  The mode of the output LIST of the FOR affects the result much as it
  would in an assignment: that is, a FOR outputting to a LIST in
  WRITE-mode overwrites previous contents, while a FOR outputting to a
  LIST in APPEND-mode adds to previous contents.






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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


  CAUTION TO THE READER: For convenience, these specifications use
  phrases such as 'LISTs referenced by a FOR'.  Recall that such a
  phrase is not literally correct, in the sense that the operands of a
  FOR are always LIST members, not LISTs.

7.1 Details of input set specification

     The input set is specified by a Datalanguage expression that
     evaluates to a set of LIST-members.  Such an expression can be
     simply the set of all members of a LIST, or it can be a subset of
     the members of a LIST, specified by content.  For example, with
     the description:

         F FILE LIST
              R STRUCT
                    A STR (1)
                    B STR (2)
                    END

     the expression:
        F.R
     references all R's on the LIST F.  However:
        F.R WITH A EQ '5'
     references only those R's containing an A having the value '5'.
     The expressions permitted as input set specifications are of the
     form:
        <list-member-name> WITH <boolexp>
     The <boolexp> is constructed of comparison expressions joined by
     the Boolean operators AND and OR.  Any expression can be negated
     with NOT.

     Comparison operators have the highest precedence.  Next highest is
     AND, then OR, then NOT.

     The comparison expressions are restricted to the form:
        <container name> <comop> <constant>
     where:
     (a)   <constant> is a string constant enclosed in single quotes
           (see section 10.2 for a discussion of constants)
     (b)   <comop> is one of six operators:
                     EQ          equal
                     NE          not equal
                     LT          less than
                     GT          greater than
                     LE          less than or equal to
                     GE          greater than or equal to
     (c)   <container name> is the name of a STRING that appears once
           in each LIST-member.



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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     The constant is truncated or padded with blanks on the right to
     make it equal in size to the container to which it is being
     compared.  Notice that padding on the right is not always
     desirable (users will have control over the padding in a future
     release).  In particular, care must be exercised when using
     numbers in Version 0/9.  (A number represented as a STRING should
     actually be described as a number; eventually it will be possible
     to do this).

7.2 FOR-body

     Two operations are legitimate in a FOR-body:  FOR and assignment.

     These are subject to the restrictions discussed in Section 6.1 and
     in the introduction to Section 7.  The restrictions are related to
     three requirements:  (1) that the names be recognizable (see
     Section 9 for details), (2) that a request be consistent regarding
     direction of data transfer between containers, both within itself
     and with the MODE of outermost containers, and (3) that transfers
     occur between objects, not sets of objects.  The first two
     requirements are permanent, but will become weaker in later
     versions of the language.  The last requirement is temporary and
     will be present only in early versions.

     Due to an implementation problem associated with Version 0/9,
     there is a somewhat bizarre restriction applied to references made
     in the body of a loop nested in another loop.  This restriction is
     not expected to pose any practical problems for users, and is not
     part of the language design, but is discussed here for
     completeness.

     The restriction is most easily understood by example:

     given the description
         F LIST
               R STRUCT
                     A STR (3)
                     BL LIST (3)
                           B STR (3)
                     C STR (3)
                     END
     and the request fragment:
         FOR ...,R
               FOR ...,B
                     ... = A ;
                     ... = C ;
                     END
               END



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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     observe:
     (a)   The outer loop processes the set of R's in F.
     (b)   For each R in F, the inner loop processes the set of B's in
           the BL contained in that R.
     (c)   In the body of the inner loop, there are references to A and
           C, which do not occur in B, but do occur in R.  That is, the
           objects referenced in the inner loop body are defined by the
           outer loop, not the inner loop.  In general, this is fine;
           in the case of C, however, we have a problem.
     (d)   C occurs beyond the end of BL.

     The 0/9 compiler is capable of neither (1) looking ahead enough to
     locate C before it compiles code for the loop, nor (2) while
     generating code to loop on the B's in BL, generating a separate
     body of code that skips to the end of BL to locate C.  Thus it can
     handle A, which has been located before it begins loop generation,
     but it cannot handle C, which requires a little foresight.

     The request fragment shown would not cause problems if the
     description were changed to:

         F LIST
               R STRUCT
                     A STR (3)
                     C STR (3)
                     BL LIST (3)
                           B STR (3)
                     END

     Then both A and C would have been found before code for the inner
     loop was generated.

8.  Data Transmission

  Data is transferred from container to container by execution of
  assignment and FOR operations.  The outermost containers involved in
  transfers can be files or ports.  If both are files, then the
  transfer is internal to the Datacomputer.  If either is a port, then
  an address in the external world is needed to accomplish the data
  transmission.











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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


  Such an address is supplied through a CONNECT-request, which
  associates a container (having a function of PORT) with an external
  address:
     CONNECT <ident> TO <address> ;
  Here <address> is either a specifications of host and socket number,
  or a TENEX file designator (for CCA's TENEX) enclosed in single
  quotes.  The host and socket form is:
     <socket> AT <host>
  where <socket> is a decimal number, and <host> is either a decimal
  number or a standard host name (since standard host names don't exist
  right now, it has to be the TENEX 'standard' name for the host.
  Contact the author for the latest list.)  If <host> is omitted, it is
  taken to be the host from which the Datalanguage is being
  transmitted.

  The address associated with a port can be changed by issuing another
  CONNECT-request.

  A DISCONNECT-request simply breaks an existing port/address
  association without establishing a new one.  (A CLOSE-request that
  references an open port executes a DISCONNECT.)  The syntax of
  DISCONNECT is:
     DISCONNECT <ident> ;

  A port is disconnected when: (a) no successful CONNECT-request has
  ever been issued for it, or (b) a DISCONNECT for the port has been
  executed since the last successful CONNECT.

  When a disconnected port is referenced in an assignment, it is
  connected by default either to:
  (a) the connection used for the transmission of Datalanguage to the
        Datacomputer, or
  (b) the connection used for the transmission of Datacomputer
        diagnostics to the user
  The choice between (a) and (b), of course, depends on whether the
  reference is for input or output.  These connections are established
  by the network user's ICP to the Datacomputer at the beginning of the
  session.

  Note that CONNECT and DISCONNECT do not open files or network
  connections.  They simply make address associations within the
  Datacomputer.  The files and connections are opened before each
  request and closed after each request.








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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


9.  Names in Datalanguage

  A name is recognized when it has been associated with a particular
  data container or set of containers.

  Datalanguage has mechanisms for the recognition of names in contexts.
  That is, the meaning of the name is related to where it appears.

  This makes it possible to attach natural meanings to partially
  qualified names.

  For example:

      WEATHER FILE LIST
            STATION STRUCT
                  CITY STR (15)
                  STATE STR (15)
                  DATA LIST (24)
                        OBSERVATION STRUCT
                              HOUR STR (2)
                              TEMPERATURE STR (3)
                              HUMIDITY STR (2)
                              PRESSURE STR (4)
                              END
                  END

      RESULTS PORT LIST
            RESULT STRUCT
                  CITY STR (15)
                  HOUR STR (2)
                  TEMPERATURE STR (3)
                  END

      FOR STATION WITH STATE EQ 'CALIFORNIA'
            FOR RESULT, OBSERVATION WITH HOUR GT '12'
                        AND HUMIDITY LT '75'
                  CITY = CITY ;
                  HOUR = HOUR ;
                  TEMPERATURE = TEMPERATURE ;
                  END ;
            END ;

  in the assignment 'CITY = CITY', the first CITY is understood to be
  RESULT.CITY and the second is understood to be STATION.CITY.







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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


9.1 Informal Presentation of Recognition Rules

     'Ident' is used in the sense of section 3.  For example, in the
     description:
        F FILE LIST R STRUCT A STR (1) B STR (1) END
        F, R, A and B are idents.

     A context is a tree whose nodes are idents.  In such a tree, the
     terminal nodes are idents of STRINGs.  The ident of a LIST is
     superior to the ident of the LIST-member.  The ident of a STRUCT
     is superior to the idents of the STRUCT elements.  The context
     whose top node is F is said to be the context of F.

                 +-----+
                 !  F  !
                 +-----+
                    !
                    !
                 +-----+
                 !  R  !
                 +-----+
                    !
                    !
         +----------+----------+
         !                     !
         !                     !
      +-----+               +-----+
      !  A  !               !  B  !
      +-----+               +-----+



      Figure 9.1-1  The context of F

     A pathname is a sequence of idents, naming nodes along a path from
     one node to another.  A full pathname in the context starts at the
     topmost node.  Thus F.R.B is a full pathname in the context of F.
     A partial pathname starts at a node other than the topmost node
     (e.g.  R.B, B).

     In Datalanguage, pathnames omitting intermediate nodes, such as
     F.B (which omits 'R'), are not permitted.  Thus partial pathnames
     are partial only in that additional names are implied on the left.








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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     Three attempts at recognition of a pathname, PN, in a context, CX,
     are made:

     (a)   recognition of PN as a full pathname in CX
     (b)   recognition of PN as a partial pathname in which only the
           topmost node of CX is omitted
     (c)   recognition of PN as an arbitrary partial pathname occurring
           only once in CX.

     The attempts are made in the above order, and the recognition
     process halts with the first successful attempt.

     As an example, consider the description:

         F FILE LIST
               R STRUCT
                     A STR
                     B STR
                     S STRUCT
                           R STR

     which defines the context in Figure 9.1-2.


                                 +-----+
                                 !  F  !
                                 +-----+
                                    !
                                    !
                                 +-----+
                                 !  R  !
                                 +-----+
                                    !
                                    !
                   +----------------+----------------+
                   !                !                !
                   !                !                !
                +-----+          +-----+          +-----+
                !  A  !          !  B  !          !  S  !
                +-----+          +-----+          +-----+
                                                     !
                                                     !
                                                  +-----+
                                                  !  R  !
                                                  +-----+

                 Figure 9.1-2      Example Context




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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     In this context, F.R.A is a full pathname.  Thus, F.R.A is
     recognized in attempt (a).  R is a partial pathname in which only
     the topmost node is omitted.  Thus R is recognized in attempt (b).
     Note carefully that R is recognized as a reference to F.R, not to
     F.R.S.R.  Finally, B is an arbitrary partial pathname occurring
     only once in the context.  Thus B is recognized in attempt (c).

     Two stacks of contexts are maintained:  one for names used in an
     input sense, and one for names used in an output sense.  When a
     name is to be recognized, it is first decided whether the
     reference is an input reference or an output reference.  An input
     reference is (a) the right hand operand of an assign, or (b) a
     name in the input set spec of a FOR.  An output reference is (a)
     the left operand of an assign, or (b) the output operand of a FOR.
     The first context on the appropriate context stack is then
     searched, according to the procedure outlined on the previous
     page.  If the name is neither recognized nor ambiguous in that
     context, search continues in the next context on the stack.  If
     the name can be recognized in none of the contexts on the
     appropriate stack, it is unrecognizable.

     When a stack is empty, the recognition procedure is different.
     The search is carried on in a special context: The context of
     %OPEN.  Its top node, %OPEN, is a built in system ident.
     Subordinate to %OPEN is a context for each open directory node.
     Each such context represents all the idents defined in the
     directory nodes having data descriptions:
        F FILE LIST R STRUCT A STR (1) B STR (1)
     and:
        P PORT LIST R STRUCT A STR (1) B STR (1)
     then the context of %OPEN would be as in Figure 9.1-3.




















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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


                                +-------+
                                ! %OPEN !
                                +-------+
                                    !
                                    !
                        +-----------+-----------+
                        !                       !
                        !                       !
                +-----+                      +-----+
                !  A  !                      !  S  !
                +-----+                      +-----+
                   !                            !
                   !                            !
                +-----+                      +-----+
                !  R  !                      !  R  !
                +-----+                      +-----+
                   !                            !
                   !                            !
             +-----+-----+                +-----+-----+
             !           !                !           !
             !           !                !           !
          +-----+     +-----+          +-----+     +-----+
          !  A  !     !  B  !          !  A  !     !  B  !
          +-----+     +-----+          +-----+     +-----+


                 Figure 9.1-3      The Context of %OPEN

     When a directory node is closed, the corresponding context is
     removed from the context of %OPEN.  When a node is opened, the
     associated context is added as the rightmost context subordinate
     to %OPEN.

9.2 Context Stack Maintenance

     The context stacks are always empty between requests.  The FOR-
     operator adds entries to the stacks.  FOR A adds the context of A
     to the input context stack.  FOR A, B ... adds the context of A to
     the output stack and the context of B to the input stack.

     When adding to an empty stack, FOR adds two contexts instead of
     one.  The second addition to the stack is the context of the
     looparg; the first addition is the context of the outermost
     container which encloses the looparg.







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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     For example, given a context of %OPEN as in Figure 9.1-3, and
     empty context stacks, the fragment 'FOR F.R ...' adds two
     contexts: (1) the context of F, and (2) the context of F.R.

     Contexts are removed from the stacks by the END matching the FOR
     which added them.

10.  Miscellaneous Topics

10.1 The LIST-request

     The LIST-request provides a means for the user to inspect system
     data of interest to him.  The user can determine the contents of
     the directory, the source or parsed form of any data description
     in the system, and the mode and connection status of any open file
     or port.

     The LIST operator has a single operand, which can have any of
     several forms.  The action of the operator is to output a list of
     values on the Datalanguage output port.

     To output a list of pathnames, the operand used is '%ALL'.  When
     '%ALL' appears alone, all pathnames in the directory are listed.
     When '%ALL' appears after the last ident in a directory pathname,
     the full pathnames of all nodes subordinate to the named node are
     listed.

     To output one or more source descriptions, the operand '.%SOURCE'
     is used.  '.%SOURCE' is preceded with one of (a) '%ALL', (b)
     '%OPEN', or (c) the ident of an open outermost container.  The
     output is either (a) all descriptions, (b) all open descriptions,
     or (c) a particular open description.

     To output a parsed description, the operand '.%DESC' is used
     ('%DESCRIPTION' is also accepted).  This operand is preceded
     either with (a) '%OPEN', or (b) the ident of an open outermost
     container.














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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     Examples:

        Let P be the ident of an open PORT.  Let A.B.C be a
        directory pathname.
            LIST %ALL
            LIST A.B.C.%ALL
            LIST %OPEN
            LIST %ALL.%SOURCE
            LIST %OPEN.%SOURCE
            LIST P.%SOURCE
            LIST %OPEN.%DESC
            LIST P.%DESC

        Note that 'LIST A.B.C.%SOURCE' is not legal - '.%SOURCE'
        must be preceded with the ident of an open container, not a
        pathname.  A similar restriction applies to '.%DESC'.

10.2 Constants in Datalanguage

     A constant of type STRING can be included in a Datalanguage
     request by enclosing it in single quotes:
        'ABC'
     A single quote is included in a constant by preceding it with a
     double quote:
        'FATHER"'S'
     Likewise, a double quote is included by preceding it with a double
     quote:
        'JOHN SAID ""HELLO""'

     Such constants can be used on the right of comparison operators
     and of assignment operators which reference strings.

     Eventually, Datalanguage will contain facilities for the inclusion
     of constants of all datatypes; such constants are simply a special
     case of the Datalanguage expression and will be permitted wherever
     such expressions are permitted.

10.3 Character Set

     Internally, Version 0/9 of the Datacomputer software operates in
     7-bit ASCII characters.  Its output to the ARPANET is converted to
     8-bit ASCII.  On input from the ARPANET, it expects 8-bit
     characters, which it converts to 7-bit characters.








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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     To convert from 7- to 8-bit characters, a '0' bit is prefixed.  To
     convert from 8- to 7-bit characters, the high-order bit is
     checked.  If the high-order bit is a '0', the bit is discarded and
     the character is accepted as a 7-bit character.  If the high-order
     bit is a '1', then the character is discarded.

     (In the following discussion, as elsewhere in this memo, all
     references to numerical character codes are in decimal).

     The remainder of this section discusses treatment of codes 0
     through 127, when they appear in Datalanguage requests.

     In general, printing characters are acceptable in requests, while
     control characters are not.  There are some exceptions, which are
     detailed below.  The printing characters are codes 32-126.  The
     control characters are codes 0-31 and 127.

     Certain control characters are accepted:

        Tab(9) is accepted freely in requests.  It functions as a
        separator (explained below).

        EOL(31), meaning end-of-line, is accepted in requests,
        functioning both as a separator and an activator (a).  EOL has
        a special meaning in data, and should not be introduced into
        STRING constants(***).

        Control-L(12) is an activator and a high-level request
        delimiter.  It terminates the test of any request being
        processed when it is encounter in the input stream.  It is
        useful in Datacomputer-user program synchronization.

        Control-Z(26) means end-of-session when encountered in
        Datalanguage.  It has the properties of control-L, and in
        addition, causes the Datacomputer to execute an end-of-session
        procedure, which results in closing the Datalanguage
        connections, closing any open files or ports, etc.  The effect
        is equivalent to a [LOGOUT(which] does not exist yet).

        The two-character sequence <carriage return(13), line feed(10)>
        is equivalent to EOL (and is translated to EOL on input from
        the network).  The reverse sequence, as well as either
        character alone, is treated simply as other control characters
        (ignored).

     All other control characters are ignored.





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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     The printing characters are further divided into four groups:
     special characters, uppercase letters, lower case letters, and
     digits (the membership of these groups is defined in section 11).

     Corresponding upper and lower case letters are equivalent in
     requests, except with quoted strings.

     Certain special characters have a lexical function, which is
     either break or separator.  A break character terminates the
     current lexical item and returned itself as the next item.  A
     separator character terminates the current item but does not begin
     a new item (i.e., its only function is to separate items).
     Multiple separators are equivalent to a single separator.  A
     separator can always be inserted before or after a break
     character, without altering the meaning of the request.

     The separators are tab(9), space(32), and end-of-line(31).

     The break characters are left parenthesis(40), right
     parenthesis(41), equals(61), semicolon(59), period(46), comma(44),
     quote(39), and slash(47).

     (a)   An activator character causes the Datacomputer to process
           whatever has been received since the previous activator or
           the beginning of the request.  The meaning of a request is
           independent of the presence/absence of activators.  However,
           a request will not be executed until an activator beyond the
           end of the request is received.

     While Version 0/9 defines (carriage return, linefeed) in terms of
     EOL, network users should not think in terms of sending EOL's to
     the Datacomputer over the network.  EOL is not part of the network
     ASCII character set, and has no definite permanent place in
     Datacomputer implementation plans.

10.4 Comments

     Comments can be included in Datalanguage requests.  A comment is
     begun with the two-character sequence '/*', and ended with the
     two-character sequence '*/'.  Since slash is a break character, a
     comment does cause a lexical break; its overall effect is that of
     a separator.









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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


10.5 Reserved Identifiers

     Certain identifiers are reserved in Datalanguage, and should not
     be used to name containers or directory nodes.  These are:

     AND
     APPEND
     AT
     CLOSE
     CONNECT
     CREATE
     DELETE
     DISCONNECT
     END
     EQ
     FILE
     FOR
     GE
     GT
     LE
     LIST
     LT
     NODE
     NE
     NOT
     OPEN
     OR
     PORT
     READ
     STR
     STRUCT
     TO
     WITH
     WRITE

     More reserved identifiers will be added in Version 0/10.















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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


11.  Datalanguage Syntax Expressed in BNF

11.1 Requests

     11.1.01  <request>  ::=  ;
     11.1.02  <request>  ::=  <create>
     11.1.03  <request>  ::=  OPEN <pn>  ;
     11.1.04  <request>  ::=  OPEN <pn> <mode>  ;
     11.1.05  <request>  ::=  CLOSE <ident>  ;
     11.1.06  <request>  ::=  CONNECT <ident> TO <address>  ;
     11.1.07  <request>  ::=  DISCONNECT <ident>  ;
     11.1.08  <request>  ::=  MODE <ident> <mode>  ;
     11.1.09  <request>  ::=  DELETE <pn>  ;
     11.1.10  <request>  ::=  LIST <listarg>  ;
     11.1.11  <request>  ::=  <sr-request>  ;

11.2 Data Description and Creation

     11.2.01  <create>  ::=  CREATE <pn>
     11.2.02  <create>  ::=  CREATE <pn> <ftn> LIST <desc>
     11.2.03  <create>  ::=  CREATE <pn> <ftn> LIST <size> <desc>

     11.2.04  <desc>  ::=  <ident> <attributes>

     11.2.05  <attributes>  ::=  LIST <size> <desc>
     11.2.06  <attributes>  ::=  STRUCT <descs> END
     11.2.07  <attributes>  ::=  STR <size>
     11.2.08  <attributes>  ::=  STR <size> ,I=D

     11.2.09  <descs>  ::=  <desc>
     11.2.10  <descs>  ::=  <descs> <desc>

     11.2.11  <ftn>  ::=  PORT
     11.2.12  <ftn>  ::=  FILE
     11.2.13  <ftn>  ::=  TEMP PORT
     11.2.14  <ftn>  ::=  TEMPORARY PORT

     11.2.15  <size>  ::=  (  <integer constant>  )













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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


11.3 Data Storage and Retrieval

     11.3.01  <sr-request>  ::=  <assign>
     11.3.01  <sr-request>  ::=  <loop>

     11.3.03  <assign>  ::=  <pn> = <object>

     11.3.04  <loop>  ::=  FOR <looparg> <loopbody> END

     11.3.05  <looparg>  ::=  <exp>
     11.3.06  <looparg>  ::=  <pn> , <exp>

     11.3.07  <loopbody>  ::=  <sr-request>
     11.3.08  <loopbody>  ::=  <loopbody1> <sr-request>
     11.3.09  <loopbody>  ::=  <loopbody1>

     11.3.10  <loopbody1>  ::=  <sr-request>  ;
     11.3.11  <loopbody1>  ::=  <loopbody1> <sr-request>  ;

11.4 Expressions

     11.4.01  <exp>  ::=  <pn>
     11.4.02  <exp>  ::=  <pn> WITH <boolexp>

     11.4.03  <boolexp>  ::=  <pn> <comop> <string constant>
     11.4.04  <boolexp>  ::=  (  <boolexp>  )
     11.4.05  <boolexp>  ::=  NOT <boolexp>
     11.4.06  <boolexp>  ::=  <boolexp> AND <boolexp>
     11.4.07  <boolexp>  ::=  <boolexp> OR <boolexp>

     11.4.08  <comop>  ::=  EQ
     11.4.09  <comop>  ::=  NE
     11.4.10  <comop>  ::=  GT
     11.4.11  <comop>  ::=  LT
     11.4.12  <comop>  ::=  GE
     11.4.13  <comop>  ::=  LE















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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


11.5 Miscellaneous

     11.5.01  <address>  ::=  <quote> <TENEX file designator>
              <quote>
     11.5.02  <address>  ::=  <socket> AT <host>
     11.5.03  <address>  ::=  <socket>

     11.5.04  <socket>  ::=  <integer constant>  //INTERPRETED AS
              DECIMAL

     11.5.05  <host>  ::=  <integer constant>  //INTERPRETED AS
              DECIMAL
     11.5.06  <host>  ::=  *****  TENEX host names *****

     11.5.07  <object>  ::=  <pn>
     11.5.08  <object>  ::=  <string constant>

     11.5.09  <mode>  ::=  READ
     11.5.10  <mode>  ::=  APPEND
     11.5.11  <mode>  ::=  WRITE

     11.5.12  <listarg>  ::=  %ALL
     11.5.13  <listarg>  ::=  <pn>.%ALL
     11.5.14  <listarg>  ::=  %OPEN
     11.5.15  <listarg>  ::=  %ALL.%SOURCE
     11.5.16  [<LISTARG>]  ::=  <IDENT>.%SOURCE
     11.5.17  <listarg>  ::=  %OPEN.%SOURCE
     11.5.18  <listarg>  ::=  %OPEN.%DESC
     11.5.19  <listarg>  ::=  <ident>.%DESC

     11.5.20  <pn>  ::=  <ident>
     11.5.21  <pn>  ::=  <pn>.<ident>

     11.5.22  <ident>  ::=  <letter>
     11.5.23  <ident>  ::=  <ident> <letter>
     11.5.24  <ident>  ::=  <ident> <digit>

     11.5.25  <integer constant>  ::=  <digit>
     11.5.26  <integer constant>  ::=  <integer constant> <digit>

     11.5.27  <string constant>  ::=  <quote> <string conbody>
              <quote>

     11.5.28  <string conbody>  ::=  <nonquote>
     11.5.28  <string conbody>  ::=  <string conbody> <nonquote>






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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


11.6 Character Set

     11.6.01  <separator>  ::=   //SPACE(32)
     11.6.02  <separator>  ::=   //TAB(9)
     11.6.03  <separator>  ::=  <eol>

     11.6.04  <special>  ::=  <quote>
     11.6.05  <special>  ::=  <superquote>
     11.6.06  <special>  ::=  <special1>

     11.6.07  <letter>  ::=  A
     11.6.08  <letter>  ::=  B
      ...............
     11.6.09  <letter>  ::=  Z

     11.6.10  <letter>  ::=  a
     11.6.11  <letter>  ::=  b
      ...............
     11.6.12  <letter>  ::=  z

     11.6.13  <digit>  ::=  0
     11.6.14  <digit>  ::=  1
      ...............
     11.6.15  <digit>  ::=  9

     11.6.16  <nonquote>  ::=  <letter>
     11.6.17  <nonquote>  ::=  <digit>
     11.6.18  <nonquote>  ::=  <superquote> <quote>
     11.6.19  <nonquote>  ::=  <superquote> <superquote>
     11.6.20  <nonquote>  ::=  <special1>
     11.6.21  <nonquote>  ::=  <separator>

     11.6.22  <eol>  ::=  //EOL (31)
     11.6.23  <eol>  ::=  <carriage return> <line feed>

     11.6.24  <carriage return>  ::=  //CARRIAGE RETURN (13)
     11.6.25  <line feed>  ::=  //LINE FEED (10)

     11.6.26  <quote>  ::=  ' //SINGLE QUOTE(44)

     11.6.27  <superquote>  ::=  " //DOUBLE QUOTE(34)

     11.6.28  <special1>  ::=  ! //EXCLAMATION POINT(33)
     11.6.29  <special1>  ::=  # //NUMBER SIGN(35)
     11.6.30  <special1>  ::=  $ //DOLLAR SIGN(36)
     11.6.31  <special1>  ::=  % //PERCENT SIGN(37)
     11.6.32  <special1>  ::=  & //AMPERSAND(38)
     11.6.33  <special1>  ::=  ( //LEFT PARENTHESIS(40)



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RFC 515       Specifications for Datalanguage, Version 0/9   6 June 1973


     11.6.34  <special1>  ::=  ) //RIGHT PARENTHESIS(41)
     11.6.35  <special1>  ::=  * //ASTERISK(42)
     11.6.36  <special1>  ::=  + //PLUS SIGN(43)
     11.6.37  <special1>  ::=  , //COMMA(44)
     11.6.38  <special1>  ::=  - //MINUS SIGN(45)
     11.6.39  <special1>  ::=  . //PERIOD(46)
     11.6.40  <special1>  ::=  / //SLASH(47)
     11.6.41  <special1>  ::=  : //COLON(58)
     11.6.42  <special1>  ::=  ; //SEMICOLON(59)
     11.6.43  <special1>  ::=  < //LEFT ANGLE BRACKET(60)
     11.6.44  <special1>  ::=  = //EQUAL SIGN(61)
     11.6.45  <special1>  ::=  > //RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET(62)
     11.6.46  <special1>  ::=  ? //QUESTION MARK(63)
     11.6.47  <special1>  ::=  @ //AT-SIGN(64)
     11.6.48  <special1>  ::=  [ //LEFT SQUARE BRACKET(91)
     11.6.49  <special1>  ::=   //BACK SLASH(92)
     11.6.50  <special1>  ::=  ] //RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET(93)
     11.6.51  <special1>  ::=  ^ //CIRCUMFLEX(94)
     11.6.52  <special1>  ::=  _ //UNDERBAR(95)
     11.6.53  <special1>  ::=  ` //ACCENT GRAVE(96)
     11.6.54  <special1>  ::=  { //LEFT BRACE(123)
     11.6.55  <special1>  ::=  | //VERTICAL BAR(124)
     11.6.56  <special1>  ::=  } //RIGHT BRACE(125)
     11.6.57  <special1>  ::=  ~ //TILDE(126)

     <EOF>


         [ This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry ]
          [ into the online RFC archives by Walter Benton 12/98 ]





















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