Sigil (computer programming)
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In computer programming, a sigil is a symbol attached to a variable name, showing the variable's datatype or scope. The term was first applied to Perl usage by Philip Gwyn in 1999 to replace the more cumbersome "funny character in front of a variable name". The name is based on the word meaning a magical symbol (see sigil (magic)).
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The use of sigils was popularized by the BASIC programming language. The best known example of a sigil in BASIC is the dollar sign (“$”) appended to the names of all strings. Many BASIC dialects use other sigils to denote integers and floating point numbers, and sometimes other types as well.
Larry Wall adopted shell scripting’s use of sigils for his popular scripting language Perl. However, as Perl is a weakly typed language, the sigils specify not fine-grained data types like strings and integers, but general categories such as scalars (using a prepended “$”), arrays (using a “@”), hashes (using a “%”), and subroutines (using a “&”). Perl 6 introduces secondary sigils, or twigils, which are used to indicate the scope of variables. Prominent examples of twigils in Perl 6 include “^”, used with self-declared formal parameters (“placeholder variables”), and “.”, used with object attribute accessors (i.e., instance variables).
In various Unix-related contexts, such as shell scripting and Makefiles, the "$" sigil was used to access the contents of a variable.
In the PHP language, which was partly inspired by Perl, “$” precedes any variable name. Names not prepended by this are considered constants.
In the MUMPS programming language, global variables and routines (procedures or subroutines) are prefixed by an uparrow (^), and the last identifier used can be referenced indirectly by an uparrow alone, this is referred to as the "naked" identifier.
In Ruby, ordinary variables lack sigils, but “$” is prefixed to global variables, “@” is prefixed to instance variables, and “@@” is prefixed to class variables (the second “@” cannot be considered a twigil, so “@@” is just a longer sigil).
In Transact-SQL, “@” precedes a local variable or parameter name. System variables (known as global variables) are distinguished by a “@@” prefix.
In Fortran, all variables starting with the letters I, J, K, L, M and N are integers by default. Fortran refers to this as "implicit typing". (This may be the source of the long tradition of using "i", "j", "k" etc as the loop indexes of "for loops" in many programming languages—few of which have implicit typing). However, it is questionable as the root source. Why were I, J, K, L, M, and N integers in Fortran as opposed to A, B, C or X, Y, Z? One posed explanation is that I and N are the first two letters of Integer. Fortran's source of inspiration is very likely that mathematicians have been using use i, j, k, ... to denote integers for hundreds of years -- for example as the Index Variable in Summation and Product.
In mIRC script, identifiers have a $ sigil, while all variables have a % prefixed (regardless of local or global variables or data type). Binary variables are prefixed by a &.
In XSLT, variables and parameters have a leading $ sigil on use, although when defined in or with the “name” attribute, the sigil is not included. Related to XSLT, XQuery uses the $ sigil form both in definition and in use.
Related to sigils is Hungarian notation, a convention for variable naming that specifies variable type by attaching certain alphabetic prefixes to the variable name. Unlike sigils, however, Hungarian notation provides no information to the compiler; as such, explicit types must be redundantly given for the variables and the prefixes are not enforced, making them more prone to omission and misuse.