Strings can be concatenated using @samp{+}, so that @samp{"a" + 'b' +
'c'} is equivalent to @samp{'abc'}. Concatenation is useful for
-splitting a single string across multiple source lines. The maximum
-length of a string, after concatenation, is 255 characters.
+splitting a single string across multiple source lines.
Strings may also be expressed as hexadecimal, octal, or binary
character values by prefixing the initial quote character by @samp{X},
When it is the last non-space character on a line, a period is not
treated as part of another token, even if it would otherwise be part
of, e.g.@:, an identifier or a floating-point number.
-
-Actually, the character that ends a command can be changed with
-@cmd{SET}'s ENDCMD subcommand (@pxref{SET}), but we do not recommend
-doing so. Throughout the remainder of this manual we will assume that
-the default setting is in effect.
@end table
@node Commands
There are multiple ways to mark the end of a command. The most common
way is to end the last line of the command with a period (@samp{.}) as
described in the previous section (@pxref{Tokens}). A blank line, or
-one that consists only of white space or comments, also ends a command
-by default, although you can use the NULLINE subcommand of @cmd{SET}
-to disable this feature (@pxref{SET}).
+one that consists only of white space or comments, also ends a command.
@node Syntax Variants
@section Variants of syntax.
that command being considered part of the previous command.
The period terminating the end of a command is optional but recommended.
-In interactive mode, each command must either be terminated with a period,
-or an empty line must follow the command.
-The use of (@samp{+} and @samp{@minus{}} as continuation characters is not
+In interactive mode, each command must be terminated with a period
+or by a blank line.
+The use of @samp{+} and @samp{@minus{}} as continuation characters is not
permitted.
@node Types of Commands