What is the significance of the semicolon in the notation for parameter \alpha?

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In summary, the statement states that the parameter alpha in the distribution of T^k_{s,i} depends only on the maximum expected surplus S^k_{s,i} of seller i on the length T of the trading period, and on t_k, the time elapsed in the trading period. This dependence is written as alpha = f_{s,i}(S^k_{s,i}; t_k, T), where the variables are on the left of the semicolon and the parameters are on the right. The function is defined as f(x) = m*x + b, or f(x;m,b) = m*x + b. The notation used in the statement may be considered an abuse of this notation, as T is clearly a
  • #1
gnome
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Given this statement "[tex]T^k_{s,i}[/tex] is exponentially distributed, and the parameter [tex]\alpha[/tex] in the distribution of [tex]T^k_{s,i}[/tex] depends only on the maximum expected surplus [tex]S^k_{s,i}[/tex] of seller i on the length T of the trading period, and on [tex]t_k[/tex], the time elapsed in the trading period. We write this dependence as

[tex]
\mbox{\Huge \alpha = f_{s,i}(S^k_{s,i};\, t_k,\, T)}
[/tex]
..."

In that last expression what is the significance of the separation of the [tex]S^k_{s,i}[/tex] from the [tex]t_k, T[/tex] by a semicolon, as contrasted with the separation of the latter two terms by a comma? It's clearly not accidental -- they follow this notation several times in the paper.
 
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  • #2
To the left of the semicolon are the variables, to the right are the parameters.
[tex]
f(x) = m\cdot x + b
[/tex] or [tex]
f(x;m,b) = m\cdot x + b
[/tex]
 
  • #3
Thanks, that's good to know. But then, what I quoted above seems to be an abuse of that notation. [tex]T[/tex] is clearly a parameter, but wouldn't you consider [tex]t_k[/tex] (elapsed time) a variable?
 
  • #4
That sounds like a question for your function, which seems to be saying that it's a parameter.
 

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