On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 10:11:43AM -0800, Michael Lazzaro wrote: > Though bitwise xor is seldom used for most people, other versions are > likely to be more frequent: the 'superpositional' flavor, for example, > is likely to have significant meaning. Same with 'none', I expect. > > & | \ ! > all any one none > > So supporting a punctuation for xor-like operations is more useful than > it might at first appear.
Maybe. How do we get at the eigenstates of a superposition? The punctuation for one and none could go away if could just count the eigenstates. -Scott -- Jonathan Scott Duff [EMAIL PROTECTED]