Brent Dax wrote:

More simply, !($x == 4) is no longer exactly equivalent to ($x != 4).
Correct. Junctive algebra and logic is slightly different. yet another
reason not to allow junctions to seep into subroutines by default.


Actually, this suggests to me a flaw in the != operator, not a flaw in
junctions. We should probably make != exactly equivalent to the
negation of ==; this implies that when != gets a junction the type of
junction is reversed (any becomes all, all becomes any).
I don't think so. I think it's important to preserve the useful
intuitive distinction between:

	if $moe|$larry|$curly == $hurt {...}     # i.e. any of them hurt

and:

	if $moe|$larry|$curly != $hurt {...}     # at least one not hurt


and also between:

	if $moe&$larry&$curly == $hurt {...}     # all hurt

and:

	if $moe&$larry&$curly != $hurt {...}     # none hurt


Damian

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