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There are a set of syntactic symbols that are used to
recognize constructs inside of brace lists. A brace list is
defined as an enum or aggregate initializer list,
such as might statically initialize an array of structs. The
three special aggregate constructs in Pike, ({ }),
([ ]) and (< >), are treated as
brace lists too. An example:
1: static char* ingredients[] =
2: {
3: "Ham",
4: "Salt",
5: NULL
6: };
Following convention, line 2 in this example is assigned
brace-list-open syntax, and line 3 is assigned
brace-list-intro syntax. Likewise, line 6 is
assigned brace-list-close syntax. Lines 4 and 5
however, are assigned brace-list-entry syntax, as
would all subsequent lines in this initializer list.
Your static initializer might be initializing nested structures, for example:
1: struct intpairs[] =
2: {
3: { 1, 2 },
4: {
5: 3,
6: 4
7: }
8: { 1,
9: 2 },
10: { 3, 4 }
11: };
Here, you’ve already seen the analysis of lines 1, 2, 3,
and 11. On line 4, things get interesting; this line is assigned
brace-entry-open syntactic symbol because it’s
a bracelist entry line that starts with an open brace. Lines 5
and 6 (and line 9) are pretty standard, and line 7 is a
brace-list-close as you’d expect. Once again,
line 8 is assigned as brace-entry-open as is line
10.