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Shouldn't ≥ also be an acceptable substitute for >=?
A problem asked for setting up an if statement wherein it was looking for a value being greater than or equal to 180. As this was not a problem with a word/answer bank, I had to type in the correct symbol, but it did not accept ≥ as an answer. I ended up using bits to show the solution, which was >=.
3 Antworten
+ 6
Programmatical symbols are different than Mathematical symbols.
+ 6
Each programming language has its own rules, syntax, grammar, keywords, operators.
In most cases, it is an important design principle that characters should be easy to type with a conventional keyboard.
There are some languages where symbols are quite unique and different.
For example, APL (literally meaning "A Programming Language") was designed in the 1950s as a mathematical notation, and later became an actual programming language.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APL_syntax_and_symbols
And many similar languages emerged since, mostly in the array language family.
There are also some esoteric language that deal with symbols, like Emojicode
https://www.emojicode.org/
Or the language Piet uses colorful 2d images as the code itself.
https://www.dangermouse.net/esoteric/piet.html
+ 3
>= are two characters, ≤ is a single character. The parser probably is not written to recognize the latter.