This is a skeletal design, added to support the overview. It should not be treated as accepted by the core team; rather, it is a placeholder until we have more time to examine this detail. Please feel welcome to rewrite and update as appropriate.
The body or definition of a function is provided by a block of code containing statements, much like in C or C++. The body of a function is also a new, nested scope inside the function's scope (meaning that parameter names are available). Statements within a block are terminated by a semicolon. Each statement can, among other things, be an expression. Here is a trivial example of a function definition using a block of statements:
fn Foo() {
Bar();
Baz();
}
Statements can also themselves be a block of statements, which provide scopes and nesting:
fn Foo() {
Bar();
{
Baz();
}
}