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{{Short description|Syntactically valid part of a program formed from lexical tokens}}
{{More sources|date=January 2021}}
A '''term''' is defined as a "linguistic construct in a [[conceptual schema]] language that refers to an entity".<ref name="ISO/IEC 2382"/>
▲A '''language construct''' is a [[syntax|syntactically]] allowable part of a [[Computer program|program]] that may be formed from one or more [[lexical token]]s in accordance with the rules of a [[programming language]].
While the terms "language construct" and "control structure" are often used synonymously, there are additional types of logical constructs within a computer program, including [[variable (computer science)|variables]], [[expression (computer science)|expressions]], [[function (computer science)|functions]], or [[modular programming|modules]].
[[Control flow]] statements (such as [[Conditional (computer programming)|conditionals]], [[foreach loop]]s, [[while loop]]s, etc) are language constructs, not [[Subroutine|function]]s. So <code>while (true)</code> is a language construct, while <code>add(10)</code> is a function call.
==Examples of language constructs==
In [[PHP]] <code>print</code> is a language construct.<ref>{{Cite
<
<?php
print 'Hello world';
?>
</syntaxhighlight>
is the same as:
<
<?php
print('Hello world');
?>
</syntaxhighlight>
{{DEFAULTSORT:Language Construct}}
[[Category:Programming constructs]]
In Java a [[class (computer programming)|class]] is written in this format:<syntaxhighlight lang="java">
public class MyClass {
//Code . . . . . .
}
</syntaxhighlight>
In C++ a class is written in this format:<syntaxhighlight lang="c++">
{{Compu-lang-stub}}▼
class MyCPlusPlusClass {
//Code . . . .
};
</syntaxhighlight>
==References==
▲{{reflist}}{{Compu-lang-stub}}
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