What's the Difference?











up vote
-1
down vote

favorite












*not sure if this counts as a real puzzle, but I will ask it anyways.





Can you catch the difference between the 2 following letters?




  1. х

  2. x


Honor system: No using online tools to find the difference!



(Deleting cause I’m getting downvoted)










share|improve this question
























  • Remember that there's a tag no-computers, for puzzles that should be solved without the use of online tools or computer programming.
    – Hugh
    Nov 27 at 3:03












  • @Hugh thank you. I left it out because it would somewhat contradict the “computer_puzzle” tag.
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 13:55










  • Oh, yeah... I guess you could have a computer puzzle that meant to be solved without computers; like a piece of computer code that errors and you have to figure out which line the error is on without a computer.
    – Hugh
    Nov 27 at 14:53

















up vote
-1
down vote

favorite












*not sure if this counts as a real puzzle, but I will ask it anyways.





Can you catch the difference between the 2 following letters?




  1. х

  2. x


Honor system: No using online tools to find the difference!



(Deleting cause I’m getting downvoted)










share|improve this question
























  • Remember that there's a tag no-computers, for puzzles that should be solved without the use of online tools or computer programming.
    – Hugh
    Nov 27 at 3:03












  • @Hugh thank you. I left it out because it would somewhat contradict the “computer_puzzle” tag.
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 13:55










  • Oh, yeah... I guess you could have a computer puzzle that meant to be solved without computers; like a piece of computer code that errors and you have to figure out which line the error is on without a computer.
    – Hugh
    Nov 27 at 14:53















up vote
-1
down vote

favorite









up vote
-1
down vote

favorite











*not sure if this counts as a real puzzle, but I will ask it anyways.





Can you catch the difference between the 2 following letters?




  1. х

  2. x


Honor system: No using online tools to find the difference!



(Deleting cause I’m getting downvoted)










share|improve this question















*not sure if this counts as a real puzzle, but I will ask it anyways.





Can you catch the difference between the 2 following letters?




  1. х

  2. x


Honor system: No using online tools to find the difference!



(Deleting cause I’m getting downvoted)







computer-puzzle






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 28 at 17:10

























asked Nov 27 at 1:25









qq410219243

123




123












  • Remember that there's a tag no-computers, for puzzles that should be solved without the use of online tools or computer programming.
    – Hugh
    Nov 27 at 3:03












  • @Hugh thank you. I left it out because it would somewhat contradict the “computer_puzzle” tag.
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 13:55










  • Oh, yeah... I guess you could have a computer puzzle that meant to be solved without computers; like a piece of computer code that errors and you have to figure out which line the error is on without a computer.
    – Hugh
    Nov 27 at 14:53




















  • Remember that there's a tag no-computers, for puzzles that should be solved without the use of online tools or computer programming.
    – Hugh
    Nov 27 at 3:03












  • @Hugh thank you. I left it out because it would somewhat contradict the “computer_puzzle” tag.
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 13:55










  • Oh, yeah... I guess you could have a computer puzzle that meant to be solved without computers; like a piece of computer code that errors and you have to figure out which line the error is on without a computer.
    – Hugh
    Nov 27 at 14:53


















Remember that there's a tag no-computers, for puzzles that should be solved without the use of online tools or computer programming.
– Hugh
Nov 27 at 3:03






Remember that there's a tag no-computers, for puzzles that should be solved without the use of online tools or computer programming.
– Hugh
Nov 27 at 3:03














@Hugh thank you. I left it out because it would somewhat contradict the “computer_puzzle” tag.
– qq410219243
Nov 27 at 13:55




@Hugh thank you. I left it out because it would somewhat contradict the “computer_puzzle” tag.
– qq410219243
Nov 27 at 13:55












Oh, yeah... I guess you could have a computer puzzle that meant to be solved without computers; like a piece of computer code that errors and you have to figure out which line the error is on without a computer.
– Hugh
Nov 27 at 14:53






Oh, yeah... I guess you could have a computer puzzle that meant to be solved without computers; like a piece of computer code that errors and you have to figure out which line the error is on without a computer.
– Hugh
Nov 27 at 14:53












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
6
down vote



accepted










Well,




the second is an ordinary lower case letter 'x', while the first is at Unicode code point 1093 decimal = 0x445. The surrounding Unicode code points yield what look to me like Cyrillic characters, so I guess that's what this one is; I think this letter is pronounced like a Scottish "ch", and is related e.g. to the Greek letter chi.




No online tools used; I




pasted the characters into a Python session and used its chr and ord functions.







share|improve this answer





















  • True... uhh. Not cheating, right? Umm... repost? Clarification! True, you weren’t cheating, but still. I was assuming the honor system covered the rest.
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 2:57








  • 2




    @qq410219243 Well, how do you expect people to figure it out then? In the font used here, those two characters look exactly the same - and if you're not allowed to distinguish them using any tools, then there's literally no way to tell them apart.
    – Deusovi
    Nov 27 at 3:31






  • 1




    I agree with @Deusovi. I mean, you can do the same using tools built into the web browser, but I don't see any reason to regard that as more or less cheaty than doing it with Python. If all we're allowed to do is look with our eyes, then the answer is: No, we can't tell the difference.
    – Gareth McCaughan
    Nov 27 at 3:38










  • Fair enough. Good job, you two!
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 3:59


















up vote
4
down vote













Easy way (though not sure if "allowed"):




Paste into start menu. First x will show no results (or Greek stuff if you have it). Second x will show normal results matching x







share|improve this answer





















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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    6
    down vote



    accepted










    Well,




    the second is an ordinary lower case letter 'x', while the first is at Unicode code point 1093 decimal = 0x445. The surrounding Unicode code points yield what look to me like Cyrillic characters, so I guess that's what this one is; I think this letter is pronounced like a Scottish "ch", and is related e.g. to the Greek letter chi.




    No online tools used; I




    pasted the characters into a Python session and used its chr and ord functions.







    share|improve this answer





















    • True... uhh. Not cheating, right? Umm... repost? Clarification! True, you weren’t cheating, but still. I was assuming the honor system covered the rest.
      – qq410219243
      Nov 27 at 2:57








    • 2




      @qq410219243 Well, how do you expect people to figure it out then? In the font used here, those two characters look exactly the same - and if you're not allowed to distinguish them using any tools, then there's literally no way to tell them apart.
      – Deusovi
      Nov 27 at 3:31






    • 1




      I agree with @Deusovi. I mean, you can do the same using tools built into the web browser, but I don't see any reason to regard that as more or less cheaty than doing it with Python. If all we're allowed to do is look with our eyes, then the answer is: No, we can't tell the difference.
      – Gareth McCaughan
      Nov 27 at 3:38










    • Fair enough. Good job, you two!
      – qq410219243
      Nov 27 at 3:59















    up vote
    6
    down vote



    accepted










    Well,




    the second is an ordinary lower case letter 'x', while the first is at Unicode code point 1093 decimal = 0x445. The surrounding Unicode code points yield what look to me like Cyrillic characters, so I guess that's what this one is; I think this letter is pronounced like a Scottish "ch", and is related e.g. to the Greek letter chi.




    No online tools used; I




    pasted the characters into a Python session and used its chr and ord functions.







    share|improve this answer





















    • True... uhh. Not cheating, right? Umm... repost? Clarification! True, you weren’t cheating, but still. I was assuming the honor system covered the rest.
      – qq410219243
      Nov 27 at 2:57








    • 2




      @qq410219243 Well, how do you expect people to figure it out then? In the font used here, those two characters look exactly the same - and if you're not allowed to distinguish them using any tools, then there's literally no way to tell them apart.
      – Deusovi
      Nov 27 at 3:31






    • 1




      I agree with @Deusovi. I mean, you can do the same using tools built into the web browser, but I don't see any reason to regard that as more or less cheaty than doing it with Python. If all we're allowed to do is look with our eyes, then the answer is: No, we can't tell the difference.
      – Gareth McCaughan
      Nov 27 at 3:38










    • Fair enough. Good job, you two!
      – qq410219243
      Nov 27 at 3:59













    up vote
    6
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    6
    down vote



    accepted






    Well,




    the second is an ordinary lower case letter 'x', while the first is at Unicode code point 1093 decimal = 0x445. The surrounding Unicode code points yield what look to me like Cyrillic characters, so I guess that's what this one is; I think this letter is pronounced like a Scottish "ch", and is related e.g. to the Greek letter chi.




    No online tools used; I




    pasted the characters into a Python session and used its chr and ord functions.







    share|improve this answer












    Well,




    the second is an ordinary lower case letter 'x', while the first is at Unicode code point 1093 decimal = 0x445. The surrounding Unicode code points yield what look to me like Cyrillic characters, so I guess that's what this one is; I think this letter is pronounced like a Scottish "ch", and is related e.g. to the Greek letter chi.




    No online tools used; I




    pasted the characters into a Python session and used its chr and ord functions.








    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Nov 27 at 1:54









    Gareth McCaughan

    59.5k3150230




    59.5k3150230












    • True... uhh. Not cheating, right? Umm... repost? Clarification! True, you weren’t cheating, but still. I was assuming the honor system covered the rest.
      – qq410219243
      Nov 27 at 2:57








    • 2




      @qq410219243 Well, how do you expect people to figure it out then? In the font used here, those two characters look exactly the same - and if you're not allowed to distinguish them using any tools, then there's literally no way to tell them apart.
      – Deusovi
      Nov 27 at 3:31






    • 1




      I agree with @Deusovi. I mean, you can do the same using tools built into the web browser, but I don't see any reason to regard that as more or less cheaty than doing it with Python. If all we're allowed to do is look with our eyes, then the answer is: No, we can't tell the difference.
      – Gareth McCaughan
      Nov 27 at 3:38










    • Fair enough. Good job, you two!
      – qq410219243
      Nov 27 at 3:59


















    • True... uhh. Not cheating, right? Umm... repost? Clarification! True, you weren’t cheating, but still. I was assuming the honor system covered the rest.
      – qq410219243
      Nov 27 at 2:57








    • 2




      @qq410219243 Well, how do you expect people to figure it out then? In the font used here, those two characters look exactly the same - and if you're not allowed to distinguish them using any tools, then there's literally no way to tell them apart.
      – Deusovi
      Nov 27 at 3:31






    • 1




      I agree with @Deusovi. I mean, you can do the same using tools built into the web browser, but I don't see any reason to regard that as more or less cheaty than doing it with Python. If all we're allowed to do is look with our eyes, then the answer is: No, we can't tell the difference.
      – Gareth McCaughan
      Nov 27 at 3:38










    • Fair enough. Good job, you two!
      – qq410219243
      Nov 27 at 3:59
















    True... uhh. Not cheating, right? Umm... repost? Clarification! True, you weren’t cheating, but still. I was assuming the honor system covered the rest.
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 2:57






    True... uhh. Not cheating, right? Umm... repost? Clarification! True, you weren’t cheating, but still. I was assuming the honor system covered the rest.
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 2:57






    2




    2




    @qq410219243 Well, how do you expect people to figure it out then? In the font used here, those two characters look exactly the same - and if you're not allowed to distinguish them using any tools, then there's literally no way to tell them apart.
    – Deusovi
    Nov 27 at 3:31




    @qq410219243 Well, how do you expect people to figure it out then? In the font used here, those two characters look exactly the same - and if you're not allowed to distinguish them using any tools, then there's literally no way to tell them apart.
    – Deusovi
    Nov 27 at 3:31




    1




    1




    I agree with @Deusovi. I mean, you can do the same using tools built into the web browser, but I don't see any reason to regard that as more or less cheaty than doing it with Python. If all we're allowed to do is look with our eyes, then the answer is: No, we can't tell the difference.
    – Gareth McCaughan
    Nov 27 at 3:38




    I agree with @Deusovi. I mean, you can do the same using tools built into the web browser, but I don't see any reason to regard that as more or less cheaty than doing it with Python. If all we're allowed to do is look with our eyes, then the answer is: No, we can't tell the difference.
    – Gareth McCaughan
    Nov 27 at 3:38












    Fair enough. Good job, you two!
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 3:59




    Fair enough. Good job, you two!
    – qq410219243
    Nov 27 at 3:59










    up vote
    4
    down vote













    Easy way (though not sure if "allowed"):




    Paste into start menu. First x will show no results (or Greek stuff if you have it). Second x will show normal results matching x







    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      4
      down vote













      Easy way (though not sure if "allowed"):




      Paste into start menu. First x will show no results (or Greek stuff if you have it). Second x will show normal results matching x







      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        4
        down vote










        up vote
        4
        down vote









        Easy way (though not sure if "allowed"):




        Paste into start menu. First x will show no results (or Greek stuff if you have it). Second x will show normal results matching x







        share|improve this answer












        Easy way (though not sure if "allowed"):




        Paste into start menu. First x will show no results (or Greek stuff if you have it). Second x will show normal results matching x








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 27 at 2:11









        sunny-lan

        2076




        2076






























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