On 15 May 2008, at 7:19 am, Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH wrote:
Unfortunately, while I thought there was a distinct lambda sign that wasn't the lowercase Greek letter, there isn't. (That said, I don't see why it couldn't be a keyword. You'd need a space after it.)

There are three lambda letters: lower and upper case Greek, and Ugaritic (U+1038D).
But there are also mathematical symbols:

        U+166CC         mathematical bold small lamda (sic.)
        U+1D706         mathematical italic small lamda (sic.)
        U+1D740         mathematical bold italic small lamda (sic.)
        U+1D77A         mathematical sans-serif bold small lamda (sic.)
        U+1D7B4         mathematical sans-serif bold italic small lamda (sic.)

These things are visually letters, but as mathematical symbols
they should not combine into words. Except that to my surprise, nay, to my utter astonishment, the Unicode 5.1 character data base classifies them as
letters just like the letter "e".

At least to give editors a fighting chance of matching their concept of a
"word" with Haskell tokens, it might be better to use nabla instead of
lambda. Other old APL fans may understand why (:-). Alternatively, didn't Church really want to use a character rather like a down tack, and have to squish it to get a letter his printer was happy with? Nah, nabla for me.

--
"I don't want to discuss evidence." -- Richard Dawkins, in an
interview with Rupert Sheldrake.  (Fortean times 232, p55.)






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