On Sunday, June 23, 2013 16:20:51 bearophile wrote: > It uses 3 dots because it's an interval that includes the right > end.
The way that you normally indicate exclusive and inclusive intervals in math is ) vs ], where ) is exclusive and ] is inclusive. Some folks will understand that. I don't think that anyone will understand that ... says anything about whether the end is inclusive or exclusive - not unless that's commonly used somewhere else that I'm not familiar with. - Jonathan M Davis