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Home/ Questions/Q 3596310
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T19:58:17+00:00 2026-05-18T19:58:17+00:00

Say that you want to create a Lua table, and all its keys are

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Say that you want to create a Lua table, and all its keys are valid lua identifiers. Then you can use the key=value syntax:

local niceTable = { I=1, like=1, this=1, syntax=1 }

If however your strings are not “identifiable”, then you have to use the ['key']=value syntax:

local operators = { ['*']="Why", ['+']="the", ['/']="brackets", ['?']='?' }

I’m a bit baffled about this. What are those brackets doing there? What do they mean?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T19:58:18+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 7:58 pm

    They identify the contained string as a key in the resulting table. The first form, you could consider as equal to

    local niceTable = {}
    niceTable.I = 1;
    niceTable.like = 1;
    

    The second form is equal to

    local operators = {}
    operators['*'] = "Why";
    operators['+'] = "The";
    

    The difference is purely syntactic sugar, except where the first one uses identifiers, so it has to follow the identifier rules, such as doesn’t start with a number and interpret-time constant, and the second form uses any old string, so it can be determined at runtime, for example, and a string that’s not a legal identifier. However, the result is fundamentally the same. The need for the brackets is easily explained.

    local var = 5;
    local table = {
        var = 5;
    };
    -- table.var = 5;
    

    Here, var is the identifier, not the variable.

    local table = {
        [var] = 5;
    };
    -- table[5] = 5;
    

    Here, var is the variable, not the identifier.

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