Okay wait. If thats what xor or means (or ‘often’ means?) with multiple inputs I made a mistake. I see that when you this:
Elliot:
In English, xor means only (exactly) one but English is often ambiguous between (inclusive) or and xor so you have to use context to figure it out since they share one word (“or”). The term “and/or” is an unambiguous way to say inclusive or. In logic, xor can mean an odd number of true inputs.
You were just talking about xor’s use in English.
What do you mean that it ‘often’ means an odd number of inputs are true?