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23:33
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Q: Is main a valid Java identifier?

Gary BakOne of my kids is taking Java in high school and had this on one of his tests: Which of the following is a valid identifier in Java? a. 123java b. main c. java1234 d. {abce e. )whoot He answered b and got it wrong. I looked at the question and argued that main is a valid identifier an...

If the teacher says it's wrong, ask them for a proof.
Just out of curiosity, could your child have selected multiple answers (as in b and c are my choices) or could they have only chosen 1? This doesn't really impact the correctness of the answer.
Frankly this concerns me. You should request a formal Parent-Teacher meeting to discuss the validity of Teacher's methodology. It is evident that teacher obviously don't know the answers to a simple question.
Presumably the teacher is tripped up on the fact that main is a "special" identifier that applications "expect" to see. And I even think it's reasonable to argue that one should not use main except for its "standard" usage... but it's still a valid identifier (which is why you can name a method main in the first place).
public String main() { return "Teacher is wrong"; }
23:33
b and c are right answers. The rebuttal should include both.
@zero298, he chose one answer B. The correct was C only, since that is what my other child chose, who is in the same class.
One of the problems with being a teacher is that even when you're wrong, you seldom have time to debate with students (and students' parents) who disagree with you.
From the spec: "The Unicode characters resulting from the lexical translations are reduced to a sequence of input elements (§3.5), which are white space (§3.6), comments (§3.7), and tokens. The tokens are the identifiers (§3.8), keywords (§3.9), literals (§3.10), separators (§3.11), and operators (§3.12) of the syntactic grammar." If it's not an identifier, which of the above types is it?
What concerns me more is actually bothering to do a Q on a trivia of the spec. Heck, there are much more important things to learn... Probably not a very good class?
@Anony-Mousse No, I think the lesson being tested is that you can't use 123java or {abce or )whoot as identifiers. A good lesson. And on the same lines, you shouldn't use main (except in the normal use as, well, main). The teacher has just confused shouldn't with can't.
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@DawoodibnKareem a pretty useless lesson if you actually have a compiler and IDE that will give you a syntax error. Plus, that would be the first student to try using {qbce as a variable name. They'd rather try d*ck. It would be different if the assignment were about, e.g., naming a variable return.
Hard to understand why a high school course would ask such a question; what does this actually measure? This would also be a quite useless interview question for software professionals.
Funny story: When I was in high school, we had the same discussion with C, if main can be the name of a variable. But I also got it wrong (by being right).
@Anony-Mousse IDE and errors? When was the last time you were completely new to programming as an average student, and tried to decipher error messages of the mess of a code you just wrote without understanding much?
I'll assume that multiple answers are allowed on this question, and the solution "b + c" is correct. The solution "b" alone is wrong and won't give any points. Surely the teacher expanded on his explanation also stated the expected answer in response to a written rebuttal?
dim
dim
As wrong as the teacher is: knowledge is knowing that "main" is a valid identifier. Wisdom is knowing that teacher expected answer c.
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That update makes it even worse. A teacher who doesn’t understand the difference between identifiers and keywords should not be allowed to teach this topic. After all, there is at least one usage, where the use of the identifier main is not discouraged: to declare the main method which the java launcher will look for when starting the application. Likewise, Object is a valid identifier in Java. You’re discouraged from naming your classes as such, but there is a class validly using that identifier.
@Holger why wouldn't anyone just say it: invite your teacher to this SO post. This is how I win arguments when someone says something really stupid at my workplace. seriously.
@dim right and if you live in North Korea, I’d indeed say, answer what the teacher expects and don’t argue.
@Eugene this is stackoverflow.com, not interpersonal.stackexchange.com nor academia.stackexchange.com, so the answers are about the technical question, not about recommendations about how to deal with that teacher. Directing to this Q&A may help, but since directing to the formal specification didn’t help either, as the teacher responded with an attempt to redefine the question, just to avoid admitting a mistake, I wouldn’t expect too much…
main is a valid identifier in many similar languages like C and C++. The fact that it's treated specially does not mean that it isn't an identifier. In fact, a special identifier is an identifier.
If the teacher is trying to test best practices for naming variables, they really feel that java1234 is a good variable name, but main is not? I absolutely disagree. This is where practical experience versus textbook trivia diverge.
Boring question with interesting backstory. OP may want to have a question about how to deal with the teacher in another stack suggested above.
Also: The backstory is irrelevant to the question. I suggest not adding/including "update" etc. in the question itself. In the comment section or a chat room, fine.
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Hi, should this be moved to Computer Science Educators?
A thing is sure : it will not make good publicity for programming teachers such a post (even if each teacher is "unique").
This is a common/universal question in the first part of any introductory programming text. The teacher is on the weak side, got confused/made a mistake on the status of "main", and is trying to CYA/rationalize their mistake by doubling down on the wrongness. It's not like what's happening is a big mystery.
dpr
dpr
I‘m wondering what the teacher thinks is best practice for identifiers, if he prefers java1234 over main.
@dpr my thoughts exactly.

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