Thanks everyone for sharing your thoughts.
I think these are fair concerns (I hated C++'s operator overloading, which 
is a similar yet different issue).

In particular, thanks for pointing out Julia.
I heard that Julia is pretty popular among scientists, even though I 
haven't used it before.
I will try to get a feel of Julia's experience with Math symbols, and 
compare with the issue here.

On Thursday, October 2, 2025 at 4:27:28 AM UTC+8 Axel Wagner wrote:

> On Wed, 1 Oct 2025 at 22:06, Daniel Lockhart <d.f.l...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> How do you handle whether a symbol identifier is public or private?
>>
> The same as if you use a language that doesn't have case (like Chinese). 
> The conventional solution in those languages is to prefix exported 
> identifiers with X (perhaps from "eXported"), as I understand it.
>
> FWIW I fully agree with Dan. I do like that Go allows arbitrary letters in 
> identifiers. And I do quite frequently use δ or ε in my code. But only, if 
> it is *my* code that is guaranteed not to be inflicted on anyone else. It 
> is cute and *I* can easily type and read it and it reads better to me than 
> "delta" or "epsilon". But that is outweighed by the downside of other 
> people having to copy-paste symbols around when trying to collaborate or 
> use my library.
>
> I don't think there is a technical reason why expanding beyond letters and 
> digits (and _) would be hard or unreasonable - with some limitations, of 
> course, as you still need to be able to lex. But making a language requires 
> drawing lines and where to draw those lines is subjective.
>
> And for what it's worth: one relatively objective argument in favour of 
> expanding beyond ASCII but not beyond letters is that restricting yourself 
> to ASCII gives English a special place and is excluding a lot of other 
> languages. Allowing letters is anti-discriminatory on a level that allowing 
> symbols isn't.
>  
>
>> On 2025-10-01 11:31, robert engels wrote:
>>
>> I agree - if you already allow non-ascii symbols - what’s the difference. 
>> It’s up to the owner of the code base to decide if it works better for them 
>> or not.
>>
>> On Oct 1, 2025, at 10:24 AM, awaw...@gmail.com <awaw...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Thanks for chiming in.
>>
>> I wonder could you or others elaborate on why allowing math symbols would 
>> make it harder than present to search for?
>> At present, in Go we can already do Japanese hiragana and katagana, not 
>> to mention emojis, whose search requirements are no different than Math 
>> symbols.
>> In fact, I use the ancient Vim editor (without any plugins) as I'm old 
>> fashioned, and Vim doesn't seem to have issues searching for "⊗".
>> I suppose the search experience is even better in VSCode or github.
>>
>> Regarding the concern that:
>> > symbols may be meaningful to the author, code consumers find it harder.
>> At present, Go supports ℏ (reduced Planck constant) and *Δ*p (momentum 
>> deviation), which arguably is meaningful not only to authors but also code 
>> consumers.
>> ⊗ may seem foreign to most Physics undergraduates, but its meaning is no 
>> doubt *universal* among quantum technology practitioners.
>> I appreciate if anyone could provide an example or scenario on code 
>> consumers of a quantum related Go package finding it hard to read σX as 
>> the Pauli X matrix or ⊗ as the tensor product.
>> In other words, within a specific domain, judiciously chosen special 
>> symbols actually help code readability.
>>
>> Sorry if I may sound a bit absurd or combative (I'm sincerely not), but I 
>> am just believing that laying out concrete details and examples helps 
>> make decisions whether pro or con.
>>
>> On Wednesday, October 1, 2025 at 3:53:54 PM UTC+8 Dan Kortschak wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, 2025-10-01 at 00:42 -0700, awaw...@gmail.com wrote: 
>>> > func ⊗(ops *tensor.Dense) *tensor.Dense {...} 
>>>
>>> Please no. Including these make the code much harder to work in as it 
>>> is harder to search for and while the symbols may be meaningful to the 
>>> author, code consumers find it harder. If you need maths symbols, put 
>>> them in the godoc. 
>>>
>>>
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