What does the symbol Vdash mean?
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voko
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It is negation of [tex]\Vdash[/tex] and the latter means "entails".
weetabixharry
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Yes, I saw the [itex]\Vdash[/itex] symbol listed as "entails" in Wikipedia's list of mathematical symbols. However, in that article, the explanation is "A [itex]\Vdash[/itex] B means the sentence A entails the sentence B, that is in every model in which A is true, B is also true."voko said:It is negation of [tex]\Vdash[/tex] and the latter means "entails".
I can't see how that applies to my example (which is not in the form[itex]A \nVdash B[/itex]).
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How about : the cases described are excluded, i.e., the definition excludes the
cases n=k=0 ?
cases n=k=0 ?
weetabixharry
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This still does not seem to make sense in the given context. The relevant phrase in full is:[tex]\mathrm{where \ } R_{n,0,k}(x) \ := \ \nVdash(n=k=0), \ \ R_{n,j,0} \ := \ \nVdash(n=j) \mathrm{ \ \ and \ \ } R_{n,j,k} \ := \ 0 \ \mathrm{else}[/tex]Bacle2 said:How about : the cases described are excluded, i.e., the definition excludes the
cases n=k=0 ?
weetabixharry
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I've spent a long time trying to reverse engineer the phrase. My best guess is that the whole phrase (see previous post) could translate into the following two statements:
[tex]R_{n,0,k}=\left\{ <br /> \begin{array}{c}<br /> 1, \\ <br /> 0,<br /> \end{array}<br /> \begin{array}{l}<br /> \text{if }n=k=0 \\ <br /> \text{otherwise}<br /> \end{array}<br /> \right.[/tex]
[tex]R_{n,j,0}=\left\{ <br /> \begin{array}{c}<br /> 1, \\ <br /> 0,<br /> \end{array}<br /> \begin{array}{l}<br /> \text{if }n=j \\ <br /> \text{otherwise}<br /> \end{array}<br /> \right.[/tex]
Even if this is correct, there are other bits of notation that I don't understand... but I suppose I should start a new thread, as this one seems pretty dead.
[tex]R_{n,0,k}=\left\{ <br /> \begin{array}{c}<br /> 1, \\ <br /> 0,<br /> \end{array}<br /> \begin{array}{l}<br /> \text{if }n=k=0 \\ <br /> \text{otherwise}<br /> \end{array}<br /> \right.[/tex]
[tex]R_{n,j,0}=\left\{ <br /> \begin{array}{c}<br /> 1, \\ <br /> 0,<br /> \end{array}<br /> \begin{array}{l}<br /> \text{if }n=j \\ <br /> \text{otherwise}<br /> \end{array}<br /> \right.[/tex]
Even if this is correct, there are other bits of notation that I don't understand... but I suppose I should start a new thread, as this one seems pretty dead.
voko
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Why don't you get in touch with the author of the article?
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voko said:Why don't you get in touch with the author of the article?
Good idea. It looks like a typo. So you should ask the author.
weetabixharry
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Yeah, I've E-mailed the author... fingers crossed that I get a reply, I suppose.voko said:Why don't you get in touch with the author of the article?
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