pub trait Dialect: Debug {
// Required methods
fn is_identifier_start(&self, ch: char) -> bool;
fn is_identifier_part(&self, ch: char) -> bool;
// Provided method
fn is_delimited_identifier_start(&self, ch: char) -> bool { ... }
}
Required Methods§
sourcefn is_identifier_start(&self, ch: char) -> bool
fn is_identifier_start(&self, ch: char) -> bool
Determine if a character is a valid start character for an unquoted identifier
sourcefn is_identifier_part(&self, ch: char) -> bool
fn is_identifier_part(&self, ch: char) -> bool
Determine if a character is a valid unquoted identifier character
Provided Methods§
sourcefn is_delimited_identifier_start(&self, ch: char) -> bool
fn is_delimited_identifier_start(&self, ch: char) -> bool
Determine if a character starts a quoted identifier. The default
implementation, accepting “double quoted” ids is both ANSI-compliant
and appropriate for most dialects (with the notable exception of
MySQL, MS SQL, and sqlite). You can accept one of characters listed
in Word::matching_end_quote
here