Absolute value and the floor function

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the definitions and formulas for the absolute value and floor functions. Participants express frustration with the lack of clear, formulaic information available online, noting that most sources provide only conceptual explanations. Suggestions are made to use Wikipedia for straightforward definitions, with specific search terms recommended for better results. There is a cautionary note about the reliability of some entries, particularly in physics, while MathWorld is also mentioned as a useful resource. Overall, the conversation highlights the challenges of finding precise mathematical information online.
Trepidation
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What formulas define these functions?
 
Mathematics news on Phys.org
2 questions for you:

1.) Have you tried looking them up?

2.) Is this for your schoolwork?
 
1) Yes, I've tried looking them up. All I've found, however, are conceptual explanations of what they are and, occasionally, vague and dubious references to limits.

2) Of course not. If my school assigned interesting problems like this, I'd get more out of doing them than hanging around math forums... Heh. No; I'm just curious, because they're exceedingly useful and I'm beginning to understand enough mathematics that I might find the formulas somewhat intelligible.
 
Trepidation said:
1) Yes, I've tried looking them up. All I've found, however, are conceptual explanations of what they are and, occasionally, vague and dubious references to limits.

You should try Google.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_value

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floor_function

2) Of course not.

Well, it's not so obvious from where I sit. It looks suspiciously like a question that a student would ask to avoid trying to find the definitions on his own. I'd be remiss if I didn't ask.
 
Oh, I didn't think of wikipedia... Thank you!
 
Trepidation said:
Oh, I didn't think of wikipedia... Thank you!

Yeah, I should of mentioned what I did: At the end of my Google search string, I typed the word "wikipedia".

The strings I used were:

absolute value function wikipedia

floor function wikipedia

For math, wiki is great. I'd be wary of the physics entries though, because there are some cranks out there who edit the pages to push their own agendas.
 
In the future, don't forget MathWorld as a possible reference :smile:
 

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