Writing Scientific Notation: Alternatives to mx10n

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the challenges of writing scientific notation, particularly the mx10n format, which can be misinterpreted as multiplication rather than a representation of numbers. Alternatives like nEm and m(10n) are proposed, but they also face issues with potential confusion over symbols. The use of parentheses or the multiplication symbol (*) is suggested as more common in algebra, while scaling units with magnitude prefixes is recommended to avoid numerical representation. The notation m · 10^n is presented as a clear alternative that minimizes confusion. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the need for clarity in scientific notation to prevent misinterpretation.
zachfoltz
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So all my life I have disliked writing in scientific notation's notation as mx10n where m and n are constants, because it looks indistinguishable from m times x times 10 to the n power. Alternatively it looks like the cross product of m and 10^n, which makes little sense because m and n are not vectors. Calculators and programs tend to display numbers in "calculator notation" men or mEn, which looks like m times Euler's constant to the n power or m times a variable E to the n.

My question is aside from m(10n) which I have never seen anyone write it as, is there an accepted way of writing values in scientific notation that doesn't require the use of symbols or letters that can or do already mean something?
 
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nEm is probably the closest you'll find.
 
That has the same issue that E could be mistaken for a variable.
 
Do you know of any symbols that don't " already mean something"? It certainly not unusual for symbols to have different meanings in different situations- you just have learn their use. And, in fact, it is very unusual to use "x" to indicate multiplication in anything other than basic arithmetic! It is more common, in algebra and above, to use parentheses (which would be confused with your suggested "m(10n"!) or, occasionally, "*", adopted from computer languages.
 
often you scale your units by using the magnitude prefix (centi,milli,micro,etc) to avoid writing magnitude numerically.
 
zachfoltz said:
So all my life I have disliked writing in scientific notation's notation as mx10n where m and n are constants, because it looks indistinguishable from m times x times 10 to the n power.
You could always write ##m \cdot 10^n##. I don't believe anyone will find that confusing.
 
Euler's constant is always written lower case 'e' and is never capitalized.
 
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