it depends mostly it is written in lower case but few start with an uppercase as Java is case sensitive
You can find a list of Java keywords in the Wikipedia article "List of Java keywords". These keywords may not be used for variables or other user-defined names.
As of Java 1.5, there are 50 keywords defined, 48 of which are used (const and goto are unusable keywords).abstractcontinuefornewswitchassertdefaultgotopackagesynchronizedbooleandoifprivatethisbreakdoubleimplementsprotectedthrowbyteelseimportpublicthrowscaseenuminstanceofreturntransientcatchextendsintshorttrycharfinalinterfacestaticvoidclassfinallylongstrictfpvolatileconstfloatnativesuperwhile
True and false are literals(special built-in value) in java and cannot be used as keywords.
No. Keywords are not called or known as Metadata in Java
it depends mostly it is written in lower case but few start with an uppercase as Java is case sensitive
You can find a list of Java keywords in the Wikipedia article "List of Java keywords". These keywords may not be used for variables or other user-defined names.
As far as I know, keywords are part of the implementation of Java, and cannot be defined or redefined.
As of Java 1.5, there are 50 keywords defined, 48 of which are used (const and goto are unusable keywords).abstractcontinuefornewswitchassertdefaultgotopackagesynchronizedbooleandoifprivatethisbreakdoubleimplementsprotectedthrowbyteelseimportpublicthrowscaseenuminstanceofreturntransientcatchextendsintshorttrycharfinalinterfacestaticvoidclassfinallylongstrictfpvolatileconstfloatnativesuperwhile
True and false are literals(special built-in value) in java and cannot be used as keywords.
No. Keywords are not called or known as Metadata in Java
abstract assert boolean break case catch char class const continue default
There is 48 reserved keywords currently defined in the java language. These keywords, combined with the syntax of the operators and separators,form the definition of the java language. these keywords can't be used as names for a variable,class or method. (chandramohan singh)
There is no scanf in Java. It is one of the keywords used in C Programming language
"verify" is not a Java keyword. I believe the link, in related links, has the complete list of Java keywords.
The final and finally keywords have no impact on the return type of a method in Java.
Java KeywordsabstractassertbooleanbreakbytecasecatchcharclassconstcontinuedefaultdodoubleelseenumextendsfinalfinallyfloatforgotoifimplementsimportinstanceofintinterfacelongnativenewpackageprivateprotectedpublicreturnshortstaticstrictfpsuperswitchsynchronizedthisthrowthrowstransienttryvoidvolatilewhileThe Java Language Specification makes a special note of the "goto" and "const" keywords:The keywords const and goto are reserved, even though they are not currently used. This may allow a Java compiler to produce better error messages if these C++ keywords incorrectly appear in programs. C++ Keywordsandand_eqasmautobitandbitorboolbreakcasecatchcharclasscomplconstconst_castcontinuedefaultdeletedodoubledynamic_castelseenumexplicitexportexternfalsefloatforfriendgotoifinlineintlongmutablenamespacenewnotnot_eqoperatororor_eqprivateprotectedpublicregisterreinterpret_castreturnshortsignedsizeofstaticstatic_caststructswitchtemplatethisthrowtruetrytypedeftypeidtypenameunionunsignedusingvirtualvoidvolatilewchar_twhilexorxor_eq