Google handles some constructs with punctuation as atomic tokens as special cases. C# and C++ are examples. A# through G# also return appropriate results, for the musical notes. H# and onward through the alphabet do not.
.NET is another example. Google will ignore a prepended dot on most words, but .NET is handled specially as an atomic token. I would bet this is a product of human curation, not of algorithms that have somehow identified .NET as a semantic token.
Searching for punctuation in a general case is hard, though. You wouldn't want a search for Lisp to fail to match pages with (Lisp). We often forget that the pages are tokenized and indexed, that Google and the other search engines aren't a byte-for-byte scan across the entire web.
I was recently trying to understand the difference between the <%# and <%= server tags in ASP.NET. Google couldn't even interpret those as tokens to search for. It took me a long time to figure out the former's true name as the data-bind operator in order to search for that and find the MS docs.