Although programming languages generally have common aspects, they are
rarely expressed in the same manner. For instance, in ANSI C,
dereferencing a pointer p
is accomplished by *p
, but in
Modula-2, it is accomplished by p^
. Values can also be
represented (and displayed) differently. Hex numbers in C appear as
`0x1ae', while in Modula-2 they appear as `1AEH'.
Language-specific information is built into for some languages, allowing you to express operations like the above in your program's native language, and allowing to output values in a manner consistent with the syntax of your program's native language. The language you use to build expressions is called the working language.
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