All NCL commands are made up of the same components: keywords, values, and punctuation. Keywords and punctuation are the parts of the NCL syntax that remain the same for every network; values are the parts that change depending on the particular configuration of a network. Values include entity instance identifiers and attribute/argument values. In general, you cannot abbreviate values, but you can abbreviate keywords as long as the abbreviation is unique. A misspeling may cause NCL to treat an entity name as if it were an attribute name. However, if spelled correctly, it recognizes multiword keywords. For example: ncl> show node finance routing circuit * can be abbreviated to: ncl> sh n finance r c * Where finance identifies which node is being used, therefore it cannot be abbreviated. Values cannot be abbreviated. For example, the following two commands are not equivalent: ncl> show node finance name ncl> show node f name The latter command tries to communicate with node f, not node finance. Notice that, the following command line is ambiguous: ncl> s n finance r c * probe rate The command is ambiguous because the abbreviation s could stand for either the set or show command. However, if the value itself consists of keywords, then it can be abbreviated. For example, the data type EntityClass, by definition, contains keywords representing the various entity class names. These keywords can be abbreviated in the same way as normal keywords, as long as the abbreviations are unique (unambiguous). See Appendix B of the DECnet-Plus Network Control Language Reference for more information on data types and keywords. As another example, note that the following two commands are equivalent. Both pass all events received by the event dispatcher from the routing entity. ncl> pass ev d out s local_stream gl f ((r), all) ncl> pass event dispatcher outbound stream local_stream - _ncl> global filter (( routing ), all) On Tru64 UNIX, the period character (".") can be used as an abbreviation meaning "the entity specified in the previous command." For example: ncl> create routing circuit circuit-1 ncl> enable .