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283 points IdealeZahlen | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.422s | source
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wduquette ◴[] No.42139909[source]
I left college with a math degree and a profound antipathy for weird cursive symbols. The one that nearly killed me was the Greek "xi". I couldn't pronounce it, and I couldn't write it with any fluency, and in some of the classes I took it was everywhere.
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anyfoo ◴[] No.42140531[source]
I encounter ξ (xi), and also ζ (zeta) a lot. Honestly, when I write them out by hand, I just make a "wild squiggly line" for ξ and a "simplified squiggly line" for ζ.

If I write it out by hand, it's most likely just for my eyes anyway, and I'd type it out on a computer if I'd want others to have a look at it. But even if I gave someone else my handwritten note, I think from context it would be pretty clear what the "squiggly lines" are supposed to be.

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Symbiote ◴[] No.42141801[source]
ζ is essentially a cursive z. ξ is near enough to a backwards 3.
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andrewshadura ◴[] No.42141938[source]
ξ is literally three horizontal bars underneath each other, in cursive.
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1. thaumasiotes ◴[] No.42142989[source]
> ξ is literally three horizontal bars underneath each other, in cursive.

And? So is 3.

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2. hanche ◴[] No.42145294[source]
The unstated point is to explain the connection between lowercase ξ and uppercase Ξ.