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Fuego
Mar4-04, 02:58 PM
I find myself continually referring to this:

\int

as the 'integral-symbol-thingy'. Does it have a name? I asked my math teacher; he said it has a name but he couldn't remember it.

Michael D. Sewell
Mar4-04, 03:07 PM
Just drop the "thingy" part. The integral sign is an elongated "S" denoting a sum(from the latin summa). It was first introduced by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz(1646-1716). The integral sign that you have shown in your post is an indefinite integral. I hope this helps. -Mike

NateTG
Mar4-04, 05:22 PM
It's sometimes called a lazy s. Typically you can say 'integral from a to b of' or 'indefinite integral of' so there's usually no real reason to specify 'integral symbol'.

HallsofIvy
Mar5-04, 07:29 AM
My father always called it a "seahorse", but I'm not certain that is standard terminology!

(Yes, "integral symbol" or "integral sign" without the "thingy" is fine.)

Your.Master
Mar6-04, 07:18 PM
Think of it like "plus sign" or "minus sign" -- these are commonly referenced symbols for common operations.

Janitor
Mar7-04, 02:27 PM
My first day of posting at this Forum, and I've already had a post deleted. [;)]

I belong to another Forum website that uses software similar to this one's, and the celebrity who runs it has deleted maybe two of my 1,400+ posts there. I am getting off on the wrong foot here, it seems. [!:)]

Hurkyl
Mar7-04, 02:30 PM
*shrug* I didn't think this thread was the right place to try and stir up contraversial politics. We have a politics forum for that, and Zero loves that sort of stuff. [!:)]

Janitor
Mar7-04, 02:33 PM
[:)]