Nick writes:

"It is a writer's job to control the reference of his signs, in so far as s/he 
can.  In writing code, you guys wouldn't put out a line of code without making 
clear what language you were writing in, would you?"

Many non-trivial programs invent their own abstractions s and work within that 
set of primitives rather than just the ones provided by the language.   Many 
modern languages go to some length to provide facilities for this in the form 
of programmable code expansion -- code that forms code.  In some sense the 
"language you are writing in" must be learned per project.   This goes beyond 
what I would call notation.  As its definition is available in the project 
source code, at some point it becomes redundant to keep talking about it.

Marcus
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