So why did > ever become greater and < be less than? Doesn’t it also depend on how your text is written? If people reading from right to left or down to up vs left to right and up to down, means it’s reversed.
Yes. >
is greater than because you’re reading left-to-right. 12 > 9, read: “twelve is greater than nine”. When reading in a right-to-left script, it’s the opposite, but because of how the BiDi spec works, the same Unicode character is actually used for the same semantic meaning, rather than the appearance. Taking the exact same block of text but formatting it right-to-left yields “12 > 9”, which is still read as a “greater than”, just from right-to-left.
Hopefully that makes sense.
stebo02@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 days ago
“37 is greater than n.”
“n is less than 37.”
Obviously both have the same meaning, but the symbols are named that way because people usually read left to right…