Lie wrote: > Ah yes, that is also used (I completely forgot about that one, my > math's aren't that sharp anymore) and I think it's used more > frequently than ><.
Where did you read that (I mean, which country)? I've never seen this sign in any german or english book on mathematics/physics/engineering I saw. > but my argument was that no math book use != or <> (except in math > for programmers). That's true. Personally, I don't ever use "a!=b" in favor of "not a==b". Regards, Björn -- BOFH excuse #282: High altitude condensation from U.S.A.F prototype aircraft has contaminated the primary subnet mask. Turn off your computer for 9 days to avoid damaging it. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list