Thank you. I apologize that my condensed example was in error. (Is the 
error you are showing that you can't create a namespaced keyword in a 
namespace you are not in?)

However, the condition I originally describe occurs when the original 
namespace is properly created with ns:

user=> (ns name1)
nil
name1=> (def ex1 {:015-00 "1"})
#'name1/ex1
name1=> (def ex2 {::015-00 "2"})
#'name1/ex2
name1=> (::015-00 ex2)
"2"
name1=> (ns name2)
nil
name2=> (::name1/015-00 name1/ex2)

Syntax error reading source at (REPL:1:16).
Invalid token: ::name1/015-00
Syntax error reading source at (REPL:1:27).
Unmatched delimiter: )
name2=>



On Tuesday, January 29, 2019 at 4:49:54 PM UTC-8, Justin Smith wrote:
>
> you are misusing the :: alias resolution operator, user is not an alias 
>
> Clojure 1.9.0 
> (ins)user=> (ns foo) 
> nil 
> (ins)foo=> ::user/a 
> RuntimeException Invalid token: ::user/a 
> clojure.lang.Util.runtimeException (Util.java:221) 
> (ins)foo=> :user/a 
> :user/a 
>
> On Tue, Jan 29, 2019 at 2:52 PM Philip Markgraf <pmar...@gmail.com 
> <javascript:>> wrote: 
> > 
> > I am moving some code to use spec and namespaced keywords under Clojure 
> 1.10.0 (release). One group of keywords starts with a numeric character 
> after the colon, which has worked fine in the non-namespaced context. 
> Creating and using the namespaced keyword works correctly in the local 
> namespace (using only the double-colon), but fails with "Invalid Token" 
> when dereferencing from another workspace. 
> > 
> > I'm not sure if this is a bug or if I have been taking advantage of an 
> undocumented/unsupported feature. 
> > Having a leading-digit keyword has been very useful, as the names are an 
> exacting fit of the problem domain and don't suffer from the addition of 
> any visual pollution. 
> > 
> > user=> (def example-a {:015-00 "015-00"}) 
> > #'user/example-a 
> > user=> (def example-b {::015-00 "015-00"}) 
> > #'user/example-b 
> > user=> (:015-00 example-a) 
> > "015-00" 
> > user=> (:015-00 example-b) 
> > nil 
> > user=> (::015-00 example-b) 
> > "015-00" 
> > user=> (::015-00 example-a) 
> > nil 
> > user=> (ns try) 
> > nil 
> > try=> (:015-00 user/example-a) 
> > "015-00" 
> > try=> (::user/015-00 user/example-b) 
> > 
> > Syntax error reading source at (REPL:1:15). 
> > Invalid token: ::user/015-00 
> > Syntax error reading source at (REPL:1:31). 
> > Unmatched delimiter: ) 
> > try=> 
> > 
> > The current behavior is certainly inconsistent, even if it is not a 
> serious bug. 
> > 
> > Thank you! 
> > 
> > 
> > -- 
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