3.1 – Lexical Conventions

Lua is a free-form language. It ignores spaces (including new lines) and comments between lexical elements (tokens), except as delimiters between names and keywords.

Names (also called identifiers) in Lua can be any string of letters, digits, and underscores, not beginning with a digit. Identifiers are used to name variables, table fields, and labels.

The following keywords are reserved and cannot be used as names:

  1. and break do else elseif end
  2. false for function goto if in
  3. local nil not or repeat return
  4. then true until while

Lua is a case-sensitive language: and is a reserved word, but And and AND are two different, valid names. As a convention, names starting with an underscore followed by uppercase letters (such as _VERSION) are reserved for variables used by Lua.

The following strings denote other tokens:

  1. + - * / % ^ #
  2. == ~= <= >= < > =
  3. ( ) { } [ ] ::
  4. ; : , . .. ...

Literal strings can be delimited by matching single or double quotes, and can contain the following C-like escape sequences: ‘\a‘ (bell), ‘\b‘ (backspace), ‘\f‘ (form feed), ‘\n‘ (newline), ‘\r‘ (carriage return), ‘\t‘ (horizontal tab), ‘\v‘ (vertical tab), ‘\\‘ (backslash), ‘\"‘ (quotation mark [double quote]), and ‘\'‘ (apostrophe [single quote]). A backslash followed by a real newline results in a newline in the string. The escape sequence ‘\z‘ skips the following span of white-space characters, including line breaks; it is particularly useful to break and indent a long literal string into multiple lines without adding the newlines and spaces into the string contents.

A byte in a literal string can also be specified by its numerical value. This can be done with the escape sequence \x*XX*, where XX is a sequence of exactly two hexadecimal digits, or with the escape sequence \*ddd*, where ddd is a sequence of up to three decimal digits. (Note that if a decimal escape is to be followed by a digit, it must be expressed using exactly three digits.) Strings in Lua can contain any 8-bit value, including embedded zeros, which can be specified as ‘\0‘.

Literal strings can also be defined using a long format enclosed by long brackets. We define an opening long bracket of level n* as an opening square bracket followed by n equal signs followed by another opening square bracket. So, an opening long bracket of level 0 is written as [[, an opening long bracket of level 1 is written as [=[, and so on. A closing long bracket is defined similarly; for instance, a closing long bracket of level 4 is written as ]====]. A long literal* starts with an opening long bracket of any level and ends at the first closing long bracket of the same level. It can contain any text except a closing bracket of the proper level. Literals in this bracketed form can run for several lines, do not interpret any escape sequences, and ignore long brackets of any other level. Any kind of end-of-line sequence (carriage return, newline, carriage return followed by newline, or newline followed by carriage return) is converted to a simple newline.

Any byte in a literal string not explicitly affected by the previous rules represents itself. However, Lua opens files for parsing in text mode, and the system file functions may have problems with some control characters. So, it is safer to represent non-text data as a quoted literal with explicit escape sequences for non-text characters.

For convenience, when the opening long bracket is immediately followed by a newline, the newline is not included in the string. As an example, in a system using ASCII (in which ‘a‘ is coded as 97, newline is coded as 10, and ‘1‘ is coded as 49), the five literal strings below denote the same string:

  1. a = 'alo\n123"'
  2. a = "alo\n123\""
  3. a = '\97lo\10\04923"'
  4. a = [[alo
  5. 123"]]
  6. a = [==[
  7. alo
  8. 123"]==]

A numerical constant can be written with an optional fractional part and an optional decimal exponent, marked by a letter ‘e‘ or ‘E‘. Lua also accepts hexadecimal constants, which start with 0x or 0X. Hexadecimal constants also accept an optional fractional part plus an optional binary exponent, marked by a letter ‘p‘ or ‘P‘. Examples of valid numerical constants are

  1. 3 3.0 3.1416 314.16e-2 0.31416E1
  2. 0xff 0x0.1E 0xA23p-4 0X1.921FB54442D18P+1

A comment starts with a double hyphen (--) anywhere outside a string. If the text immediately after -- is not an opening long bracket, the comment is a short comment, which runs until the end of the line. Otherwise, it is a long comment, which runs until the corresponding closing long bracket. Long comments are frequently used to disable code temporarily.