Will Robertson wrote: > Hello, > > The expl3 modules defines data types for working with "lists of tokens". > To summarise, a "token list pointer" is the name given to a control > sequence that is a macro with some contents that takes no arguments. > > E.g., "\foo" is a tlp here: \def\foo{abc} > > By contrast, a "token register" is the name given to what I'd usually > call a "toks", which has the property of being a little more lenient > with the types of tokens it will accept as contents. > > The problem that I'm trying to solve is what to call the contents of > these two distinct beasts. In the documentation in expl3, both toks and > tlps are described to contain "token lists", but that's clearly not the > best state of affairs. > > I think "token list" describes the contents of a toks rather well (as it > should!) but I'm at a lost what to call "a token list that doesn't > contain unescaped # characters". Would "character list" work? > > Will > I'd call it a string, but there we are. (Most other languages use the term "string" for stored text: token lists are a very TeX idea.) However, "character list" sounds okay to me. -- Joseph Wright