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On Jobs listings and search results, there is sometimes green text indicating a salary rage and or Equity next to the title. In the case where there is both, the pipe (|) is used to separate the entries. Such as:

Data Engineer listing with Pipe

Coincidentally, the pipe is used in may programming contexts to denote or. I don't see both very often, and maybe it is just a peculiarity of my mind, but when I do see both I usually end up paused wondering if the pipe means Or such that the pay will be less if you take an equity option. I really don't think the listing is trying to convey that much information, but would there perhaps be another way to present this information?

I don't have a strong suggestion for a better alternative, but I tested a couple just to ensure something other than the pipe has potential to work.

em-dash: enter image description here

space: enter image description here

color and space: enter image description here

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    I find it hard to believe many programmers would be confused by the pipe simply because in a programming context it denotes an or. Your first alternative could be viewed as subtraction as well. Would that mean the salary is 70k minus whatever equity they over?
    – Rob Mod
    Commented Mar 6, 2017 at 3:15
  • Perhaps not, this is after all just a suggestion based on sample size 1 (me). I can't say I'm at all likely to mistake an em-dash with subtraction: there is significant difference in width.
    – vossad01
    Commented Mar 6, 2017 at 3:19
  • I can't imagine a lot of people interpreting this as a logical operator rather than a design element either. But maybe I'm just not enough of a hardcore programmer. :)
    – Pekka
    Commented Mar 6, 2017 at 11:34

1 Answer 1

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It's a bitwise OR, so you get the salary bits and the equity bits.

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  • if only I knew how these appear in the registers :)
    – vossad01
    Commented Mar 6, 2017 at 15:48

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