DOMAIN is an attribute of an occurrence that determines the scope of the symbol defined. It is the range of source code in which a symbol has the potential of being used. For example, A BLISS OWN declaration creates a symbol that has a module-specific symbol domain; it cannot be used outside that module. On the other hand, a BLISS GLOBAL declaration creates a symbol that has a multimodule symbol domain; it has the potential of being used in more than one module. The format for DOMAIN is as follows: DOMAIN=(keyword[,keyword...]) The keyword can be one of the following: o INHERITABLE - able to be inherited into other modules (for example, through BLISS library, PASCAL environment, or Ada compilation system mechanisms) o GLOBAL - known to multiple modules via linker global symbol definitions o PREDEFINED - defined by the language (examples: BLISS ap, FORTRAN sin, PASCAL writeln) o MULTI_MODULE - domain spans more than one module (domain=multi_ module is equivalent to domain=(inheritable,global,predefined) o MODULE_SPECIFIC - domain is limited to one module The previous keywords are SCA terms. For information on corresponding language-specific terms, request help for the appropriate language table (for example, FORTRAN_ATTRIBUTES_TABLE) under the Getting_Started help topic. An example using the DOMAIN attribute follows: FIND DOMAIN=GLOBAL AND SYMBOL=VARIABLE This query find all global variables.