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🕸Fergus Duniho wrote on Fri, Feb 7, 2020 01:31 PM UTC:

I have modified how constant values can be included in code. In the past, a constant could be used by preceding its name with the # sign, just the same way that variables can be used, and constant names would have higher precedence than variable names. This helped keep the value constant when the name was used for a constant. But I have decided that this is a bad practice, because it interferes with a function's ability to count on its local variables having higher precedence than anything else with the same name.

So, I have made two changes. First, the @ sign may now be used in place of the # sign to get a constant value. This works only for constants, and its use will make it clearer that a given name belongs to a constant. Second, the # sign may still be used to return a constant value, but it now has lower precedence than variables with the same name. This will provide backwards compatibility so long as your variables and constants do not use the same names.


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