\title{Letters to the editor 2: Maths in \protect\LaTeX, Part 3} \author{David Carlisle} \begin{Article} The comments on the inadvisability of redefining user level commands are valid, but the example in question, \verb|\emptyset| in the AMS packages, is just due to an error in the first printing of \emph{The \LaTeX\ Companion} (as noted in \texttt{compan.err} in the \LaTeX\ distribution.) The `amssymb' package does not redefine \verb|\emptyset|. It still looks like a 0 with a line through it. The same glyph as in plain \TeX. \verb|\varnothing| is a slashed-circle. Actually this raises an interesting side issue. The error in the Companion printing was due to an error in the styles for \emph{Lucida} fonts. (The Companion does not use the cm or AMS fonts). As Lucida does provide both glyphs, it was simply an error to have the names interchanged, but consider a hypothetical situation of a math font family that only provides one slashed-closed-curve. How visually dis-similar to $\emptyset$ may it be before it becomes unacceptable to assign it to the command \verb|\emptyset|? For text fonts large differences are acceptable. `Q' does not look much like `\texttt{Q}' but both are accessed by `Q' and any differences are accepted by the reader as differences in font design. In mathematics the situation is not at all clear\ldots \end{Article}