# Literals and initializers ## Numeric literals Decimal: `1`, `10` Binary: `%0101`, `0b101001` Quaternary: `0q2131` Octal: `0o172` Hexadecimal: `$D323`, `0x2a2` ## String literals String literals are surrounded with double quotes and followed by the name of the encoding: "this is a string" ascii Characters between the quotes are interpreted literally, there are no ways to escape special characters or quotes. Currently available encodings: * `ascii` – standard ASCII * `pet` or `petscii` – PETSCII (ASCII-like character set used by Commodore machines) * `scr` – Commodore screencodes When programming for Commodore, use `pet` for strings you're printing using standard I/O routines and `scr` for strings you're copying to screen memory directly. ## Array initialisers An array is initialized with either a string literal, or a list of byte literals and strings, surrounded by brackets: array a = [1, 2] array b = "----" scr array c = ["hello world!" ascii, 13] Trailing commas (`[1, 2,]`) are not allowed.