Agreed, their reason for not allowing it is weird. No hidden overloading? OK make it explicit then: #+, #/ would be fine.
That would open a can of worms, because then the next thing would use a different symbol. AFAIK, Scala had a huge issue with random symbols polluting code readability.
That would open a can of worms, because then the next thing would use a different symbol. AFAIK, Scala had a huge issue with random symbols polluting code readability.