A good starting point for discussing the main idea is: PEP 465 -- A dedicated infix operator for matrix multiplication https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0465
Matrix multiplication is one of many special binary mathematical operators. PEP 465 successfully argues the merits of introducing a special operator for matrix multiplication. This thread starts from a discussion of the merits of binding dict.update to an operator. (For update, '+', '|' and '<<' the leading candidate symbols.) Matrices and linear algebra are not the only part of mathematics that is usually expressed with infix operators. Thus, I suggest that the main questions are: 1. In practice, how important are additional infix operators to the Python community? 2. Can we harmoniously extend Python to accommodate these new operators? Here, from PEP 465, are some highlights of the benefits. <quote> Infix @ dramatically improves matrix code usability at all stages of programmer interaction. A large proportion of scientific code is written by people who are experts in their domain, but are not experts in programming. For these kinds of users, whose programming knowledge is fragile, the existence of a transparent mapping between formulas and code often means the difference between succeeding and failing to write that code at all. </endquote> Most mathematical and scientific formulas can be written in LaTeX notation, which gives standard names for the infix operators mathematicians use. There is no transparent and obvious mapping from the present operators to those used in mathematics. https://docs.python.org/3/reference/lexical_analysis.html?#operators Using Unicode symbols for the math operators is probably unwise. Better, I suggest, is to use the LaTeX names. There is some evidence (the wish to bind dict.update to an infix operator) that outside of mathematics there is a demand for custom infix operators. -- Jonathan _______________________________________________ Python-ideas mailing list Python-ideas@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-ideas Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/