Comment by cubefox
15 hours ago
See my edit above. There is the C terminology, and the TypeScript et al terminology, and it's the same "untagged" terminology for two different things. In any case, both these kinds of "untagged" unions are different from tagged/discriminated unions. So just calling them "unions" is ambiguous at best and confusing at worst.
But no one is actually confused. You yourself understand what the author meant, from your comments. Everyone here understands what he meant.
It's neither ambiguous nor confusing to use the word union in CS. The only person who's making it so is you, by introducing semi-unrelated concepts from set theory that happen to have the same name as the established CS concept.
Why stop there? Maybe the author meant the Union, as in the United States? Itself quite ambiguous - does he mean the United States of Mexico, or the United States of the Ionian Islands? Is C# getting Corfu? Corfu dot net? :P
> But no one is actually confused.
Wrong, see this comment: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48251896
Clearly he thought that it's the same kind of union as in TypeScript and that in C# just the syntax is weird. Which is not the case. Some others who are not commenting are probably also not aware of the two kinds of union types (or three, counting C separately).
> It's neither ambiguous nor confusing to use the word union in CS.
Well, we disagree.
I see no evidence the user is confused, they said they wished the syntax were similar to TS. Though they're not the same thing, they do have comparable uses, so it makes sense to wish for similar syntax to reduce cognitive overhead.
> Well, we disagree.
Most people here know the set theory definition of unions. It's simply a niche use, compared to the usual CS definition, which is the one used in the original article and now all the comments.
You're swimming upstream with a definition that doesn't reflect what is under discussion, which you decreed as though from on high, complete with the assertion that most people don't understand unions like you do. They do.
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