3.2.1 Type Declarations
Syntax
Legality Rules
A given type shall not have a subcomponent whose
type is the given type itself.
Static Semantics
A type defined by a
type_declaration
is a
named type; such a type has one or more nameable subtypes.
Certain other forms of declaration also include type
definitions as part of the declaration for an object. The type defined
by such a declaration is
anonymous — it has no nameable
subtypes.
For explanatory purposes, this International
Standard sometimes refers to an anonymous type by a pseudo-name, written
in italics, and uses such pseudo-names at places where the syntax normally
requires an
identifier.
For a named type whose first subtype is T, this International Standard
sometimes refers to the type of T as simply “the type T”.
The definition of a type implicitly
declares certain
predefined operators that operate on the type,
according to what classes the type belongs, as specified in
4.5,
“
Operators and Expression Evaluation”.
The
predefined types (for
example the types Boolean, Wide_Character, Integer,
root_integer,
and
universal_integer) are the types that are defined in a predefined
library package called Standard; this package also includes the (implicit)
declarations of their predefined operators. The package Standard is described
in
A.1.
Dynamic Semantics
The elaboration of a
full_type_declaration
consists of the elaboration of the full type definition.
Each
elaboration of a full type definition creates a distinct type and its
first subtype.
Examples
Examples of type
definitions:
(White, Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Brown, Black)
range 1 .. 72
array(1 .. 10) of Integer
Examples of type
declarations:
type Color is (White, Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Brown, Black);
type Column is range 1 .. 72;
type Table is array(1 .. 10) of Integer;
3 Each of the above examples declares a
named type. The identifier given denotes the first subtype of the type.
Other named subtypes of the type can be declared with
subtype_declarations
(see
3.2.2). Although names do not directly
denote types, a phrase like “the type Column” is sometimes
used in this International Standard to refer to the type of Column, where
Column denotes the first subtype of the type. For an example of the definition
of an anonymous type, see the declaration of the array Color_Table in
3.3.1; its type is anonymous — it has
no nameable subtypes.
Ada 2005 and 2012 Editions sponsored in part by Ada-Europe