RE: Where is the logical 'not'?

From: Magda Danish (Unicode) (v-magdad@microsoft.com)
Date: Fri Jun 25 1999 - 14:20:44 EDT


Elmar:

I checked the Unicode Standard V2.0. Looks like NOT is represented by the
"Tilde Operator-223C". I may be wrong so I'm posting your question on the
Unicode List. Hope someone will clarify it for us.

Magda Danish
Administrative Director - Unicode, Inc.
Phone: 408-777-3720 Fax: 408-777-3784

-----Original Message-----
From: Elmar Eder [mailto:eder@cosy.sbg.ac.at]
Sent: Friday, June 25, 1999 4:48 AM
To: info@unicode.org
Subject: Where is the logical 'not'?

I just happened to hit your page

   http://charts.unicode.org/Unicode.charts/normal/U2200.html

on my web browser. There I found logical connectives such as 'and'
and 'or', but not the connective 'not' (the symbol obtained by the
LaTeX code $\lnot$). Where is its place in Unicode? Why not among
the mathematical operators?

E.Eder



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