View Full Version : Identity
Can u guys tell me the difference b/w an Equation and an Identity?
Thx
CompuChip
Jul8-08, 03:44 AM
I use the terms quite sloppily myself, but it appears that an identity expresses an equality regardless of the values of any variables. So for example,
x(x - 1) = x^2 - x
is an identity, because it is true for any values of x that you plug in. However,
x(x - 1) = 0
is an equation, which only holds when specific values for x are plugged in (called the solutions to the equation).
matt grime
Jul8-08, 06:12 AM
A more interesting identity than one which is just multiplying out a bracket would be something like
\sin^2 x + \cos^2 x \equiv 1
Note the three lined symbol which one is supposed to use for identities, rather than the = symbol. Of course, this is something that most of us (me included) would use only if it was really necessary to clarify such a point.
^ That's odd, I've covered lots of identities and I've never once seen that in any text book (nor during the bajillion trig identities I was forced to prove in highschool.)
matt grime
Jul8-08, 07:36 AM
Surely it's the first one you prove/meet, and is merely Pythagoras's theorem.
HallsofIvy
Jul8-08, 08:17 AM
^ That's odd, I've covered lots of identities and I've never once seen that in any text book (nor during the bajillion trig identities I was forced to prove in highschool.)
It's not clear whether you are talking about CompuChip's x(x-1)= x2- x or matt grimes' sin2x+ cos2x= 1 but you will find the first in any elementary algebra text and the second in any trigonometry text.
Integral
Jul8-08, 06:23 PM
I thought he was talking about the 3 line identical equal to symbol.
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2012, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.