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Why in interpreted languages the # usually introduces a comment?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-10 16:02 出处:网络
Why in interpreted languages the # normally introduces a comment? This question was asked in an exam on Shell Programming but I don\'t find any hint on why it\'s the #.

Why in interpreted languages the # normally introduces a comment? This question was asked in an exam on Shell Programming but I don't find any hint on why it's the #.

开发者_如何学编程Any ideas?


make uses the #-comment construct; and sh, one the first shells, uses the same #-comment. The writers of later shells -- csh, ksh, bash, jsh, and more -- understood that it would be a burden on users if each were to have its own comment convention, particularly since all of these shell scripts can sort-of run under any shell.

To invent yet another comment convention would be to ensure that no one would use any newly-introduced shell.

The #-comment became a de facto standard very early in Unix history.

That's my take, anyway.

-- pete

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