How to Read On-line Help Syntax Notation KEYWORDS Items in capital letters indicate BASIC keywords. Keywords are a required part of the statement syntax, unless they are enclosed in brackets. You must spell keywords correctly. placeholders Items in lowercase are placeholders for information you must supply in the statement, such as a filename. [optional item] Items inside square brackets do not need to be used in the statement. {choice1 | choice2} Braces and a vertical bar indicate a choice between two or more items. You must use one of the items in the statement unless the braces are enclosed in square brackets. IMPORTANT: The uppercase and lowercase syntax notation conventions are used to help you read the syntax rules for a statement, and are NOT capitalization rules you must type in. One other notation convention that is used is the three-dot ellipsis: item, item, ... Means more of the preceding items can be used in a single-line statement. beginning KEYWORD . used to describe multi-line statements . (or block-structured statements). Means . that other statements can be used between ending KEYWORD the beginning and the end of the block. Here is an example of using the PRINT command syntax: Syntax: PRINT [expressionlist][{,|;}] Given the syntax rule above, these are all syntactically correct PRINT statements: PRINT PRINT x PRINT x, y + 1 PRINT x, PRINT x; PRINT x + y + z, a - 1, b / 2; And there are many, many more.