Nice.<p>I think you need to add somewhere that C# is called C Sharp, and the idea - besides the connection to musical notation is that the character # ("sharp", though improperly as in ASCII it is "Number sign") is made out of four +'s, increasing from the two in C++, your sentence:<p>>C# as the '#' symbol looks like two '++' stacked on one another, indicating that C# is an increment of C++.
though at the end of the day means the same, is IMHO less clear than the original from the source you cited:<p><a href="https://www.computerworld.com.au/article/261958/a-z_programming_languages_c_/?pp=2" rel="nofollow">https://www.computerworld.com.au/article/261958/a-z_programm...</a><p>>So the naming committee had to get to work and we sort of liked the notion of having an inherent reference to C in there, and a little word play on C++, as you can sort of view the sharp sign as four pluses, so it’s C++++. And the musical aspect was interesting too. So C# it was, and I’ve actually been really happy with that name. It’s served us well.