View Full Version : what does [x] means in mathematics ?
momentum
Mar16-06, 02:27 AM
what does [x] means in mathematics ?
i have found [x]= "the greatest integer <=x "
is this true ?
then, what will be the answer of of .....
[3],[1.5],[-1.5],[3.5]
i am trying to answer, please correct me
[3]=3
[1.5]=1
[-1.5]=-1
[3.5]=3
are these correct ?
[] meaning greatest integer is a common use of the [], but it can vary.You should check whatever book your problems are from, they should define what they mean by the notation.
If it is the greatest integer function, then "[-1.5]=-1" isn't correct. You want the greatest integer less than or equal to -1.5, so it can't be -1 as -1.5<-1.
jim mcnamara
Mar16-06, 10:18 AM
So, in what way is the defintion for [ x ] you've given different from \lfloor x \rfloor ? - also given to be the symbol for the floor function, which matches the definition you gave.
None, AFAIK, just a "who's the author" thing.
IMO, it's just a bad nomen confusum problem. I've also seen it used in characteristic functions. Somebody ought to pick one use, and pitch the rest.... :) and penalize deviating authors 10 points for misuse. :)
matt grime
Mar16-06, 11:35 AM
Rubbish, Jim: there are far too few symbols possible and far too meanings that need to be conveyed. Context makes it clear what is going on.
arildno
Mar16-06, 11:40 AM
Uniqe and fossilized use of symbols is counter-productive of developing flexibility of the mind. It is the definition AT HAND that matters, and if the chosen notation is convenient for its purpose.
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