@KarlKnechtel Fair point. Most modern-ish procedural languages share a family resemblance to Fortran, Algol, and C. Some members of the family may choose to mark various syntactic elements, eg using a $ affix on variables or on some variables (like Basic strings). Or upper-case constants, or upper-case keywords. But outside that family, syntax can be quite different, eg APL, Prolog, Haskell. (I'm ignoring assembler & machine code).
In early Fortran, variables with names starting with i to n were by default integer, all other variables were by default real numbers. You could change that by an explicit declaration, though. Even though that's ancient history, there's still the tendency to use i,j,k for integer stuff like loop counters & array indices.
This led to the old hacker joke: GOD is real, unless declared integer. :)
I just got an upvote on an answer from 2017 that I'd totally forgotten about. :) Pity the OP was never seen again... stackoverflow.com/a/47249688/4014959 It's probably one of the simplest examples of a recursive backtracking generator.
@PM2Ring ah that old Fortran nugget about implicit int/float type. Of course that also means Fortran defaults Atheism, Counterfactual and Unreality to real, but not Imaginary and Nonsense.
@smci Right. :) I'm pretty sure that some of the Basic dialects I used also followed the i-n integer convention. And later versions used stuff like a trailing % to indicate the type. IIRC.