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Diagram Editor with scalable graphics. An easy-to-use tool for drawing boards and pieces of any size and color.[All Comments] [Add Comment or Rating]
Bob Greenwade wrote on Wed, Nov 22, 2023 04:06 PM UTC in reply to H. G. Muller from 03:43 PM:

I already ran into a major problem, though: using < in a HTML context is an absolute nono, as it will always be interpreted by the browser as the start of a tag. And the definition of the ID lives in a HTML context. So what you say would work in a URL that you type in the address bar, but not embedded in a web page. So perhaps we will have to look for an alternative symbol for indicating rotation to the left.

I'd noticed that as well. Of course / and \ (which would be my own inclination) have similar problems, don't they? So does just about every other punctuation mark (especially paired marks) that I can think of, except maybe for [ and ].