/Reserved-Key-Words-list-of-various-programming-languages

In a computer language, a reserved word (also known as a reserved identifier) is a word that cannot be used as an identifier, such as the name of a variable, function, or label – it is "reserved from use".

MIT LicenseMIT

"Reserved Key Words" list of various programming languages

In a computer language, a reserved word (also known as a reserved identifier) is a word that cannot be used as an identifier, such as the name of a variable, function, or label – it is "reserved from use".


Reporting Issues/Suggest Improvements

This Project uses GitHub's integrated issue tracking system to record bugs and feature requests. If you want to raise an issue, please follow the recommendations below:

  • Before you log a bug, please search the issue tracker to see if someone has already reported the problem.
  • If the issue doesn't already exist, create a new issue
  • Please provide as much information as possible with the issue report.
  • If you need to paste code, or include a stack trace use Markdown +++```+++ escapes before and after your text.

Contributing

Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to be learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are greatly appreciated.

Kindly refer to CONTRIBUTING.md for important Pull Request Process details

  1. In the top-right corner of this page, click Fork.

  2. Clone a copy of your fork on your local, replacing YOUR-USERNAME with your Github username.

    git clone https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/Reserved-Key-Words-list-of-various-programming-languages.git

  3. Create a branch:

    git checkout -b <my-new-feature-or-fix>

  4. Make necessary changes and commit those changes:

    git add .

    git commit -m "new feature or fix"

  5. Push changes, replacing <add-your-branch-name> with the name of the branch you created earlier at step #3. :

    git push origin <add-your-branch-name>

  6. Submit your changes for review. Go to your repository on GitHub, you'll see a Compare & pull request button. Click on that button. Now submit the pull request.

That's it! Soon I'll be merging your changes into the master branch of this project. You will get a notification email once the changes have been merged. Thank you for your contribution.

Kindly follow Conventional Commits to create an explicit commit history. Kindly prefix the commit message with one of the following type's.

build : Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
ci : Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Travis, Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
docs : Documentation only changes
feat : A new feature
fix : A bug fix
perf : A code change that improves performance
refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
style : Changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, etc)
test : Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests

License

Distributed under the MIT License. See LICENSE.md for more information.