I seemingly have a rverse take - I much prefer the latter. i just do not use threadiverse, i use places where !/@ means something totally else (for example in programming ! is not and @ can be used for different purposes, but in my shell, @ sigil is used for arrays). the latter is very clear to me - /c/ is comm and /u/ is user. a bit more verbose (3 characters vs 1) but not that much but much more readable for someone comming from outside or who context switches.
I seemingly have a rverse take - I much prefer the latter. i just do not use threadiverse, i use places where !/@ means something totally else (for example in programming ! is not and @ can be used for different purposes, but in my shell, @ sigil is used for arrays). the latter is very clear to me - /c/ is comm and /u/ is user. a bit more verbose (3 characters vs 1) but not that much but much more readable for someone comming from outside or who context switches.