Mathematical Notation

Mathematical notation consists of using symbols for representing operations, unspecified numbers, relations, and any other mathematical objects and assembling them into expressions and formulas.

Mathematical notation is widely used in mathematics, science, and engineering for representing complex concepts and properties in a concise, unambiguous, and accurate way.

For example, Albert Einstein's equation is the quantitative representation in mathematical notation of the mass–energy equivalence.

Mathematical notation was first introduced by François Viète at the end of the 16th century and largely expanded during the 17th and 18th centuries by René Descartes, Isaac Newton, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, and overall Leonhard Euler.

Symbols

The use of many symbols is the basis of mathematical notation. They play a similar role as words in natural languages. They may play different roles in mathematical notation similarly as verbs, adjective and nouns play different roles in a sentence.

Letters as symbols

Letters are typically used for naming—in mathematical jargon, one says representingmathematical objects. The Latin and Greek alphabets are used extensively, but a few letters of other alphabets are also used sporadically, such as the Hebrew Mathematical Notation , Cyrillic Ш, and Hiragana . Uppercase and lowercase letters are considered as different symbols. For Latin alphabet, different typefaces provide also different symbols. For example, Mathematical Notation  and Mathematical Notation  could theoretically appear in the same mathematical text with six different meanings. Normally, roman upright typeface is not used for symbols, except for symbols representing a standard function, such as the symbol "Mathematical Notation " of the sine function.

In order to have more symbols, and for allowing related mathematical objects to be represented by related symbols, diacritics, subscripts and superscripts are often used. For example, Mathematical Notation  may denote the Fourier transform of the derivative of a function called Mathematical Notation 

Other symbols

Symbols are not only used for naming mathematical objects. They can be used for operations Mathematical Notation  for relations Mathematical Notation  for logical connectives Mathematical Notation  for quantifiers Mathematical Notation  and for other purposes.

Some symbols are similar to Latin or Greek letters, some are obtained by deforming letters, some are traditional typographic symbols, but many have been specially designed for mathematics.

Expressions

An expression is a finite combination of symbols that is well-formed according to rules that depend on the context. In general, an expression denotes or names a mathematical object, and plays therefore in the language of mathematics the role of a noun phrase in the natural language.

An expression contains often some operators, and may therefore be evaluated by the action of the operators in it. For example, Mathematical Notation  is an expression in which the operator Mathematical Notation  can be evaluated for giving the result Mathematical Notation  So, Mathematical Notation  and Mathematical Notation  are two different expressions that represent the same number. This is the meaning of the equality Mathematical Notation 

A more complicated example is given by the expressionMathematical Notation  that can be evaluated to Mathematical Notation  Although the resulting expression contains the operators of division, subtraction and exponentiation, it cannot be evaluated further because a and b denote unspecified numbers.

History

Numbers

It is believed that a notation to represent numbers was first developed at least 50,000 years ago—early mathematical ideas such as finger counting have also been represented by collections of rocks, sticks, bone, clay, stone, wood carvings, and knotted ropes. The tally stick is a way of counting dating back to the Upper Paleolithic. Perhaps the oldest known mathematical texts are those of ancient Sumer. The Census Quipu of the Andes and the Ishango Bone from Africa both used the tally mark method of accounting for numerical concepts.

The concept of zero and the introduction of a notation for it are important developments in early mathematics, which predates for centuries the concept of zero as a number. It was used as a placeholder by the Babylonians and Greek Egyptians, and then as an integer by the Mayans, Indians and Arabs (see the history of zero).

Modern notation

Until the 16th century, mathematics was essentially rhetorical, in the sense that everything but explicit numbers was expressed in words. However, some authors such as Diophantus used some symbols as abbreviations.

The first systematic use of formulas, and, in particular the use of symbols (variables) for unspecified numbers is generally attributed to François Viète (16th century). However, he used different symbols than those that are now standard.

Later, René Descartes (17th century) introduced the modern notation for variables and equations; in particular, the use of Mathematical Notation  for unknown quantities and Mathematical Notation  for known ones (constants). He introduced also the notation i and the term "imaginary" for the imaginary unit.

The 18th and 19th centuries saw the standardization of mathematical notation as used today. Leonhard Euler was responsible for many of the notations currently in use: the functional notation Mathematical Notation  e for the base of the natural logarithm, Mathematical Notation  for summation, etc. He also popularized the use of π for the Archimedes constant (proposed by William Jones, based on an earlier notation of William Oughtred).

Since then many new notations have been introduced, often specific to a particular area of mathematics. Some notations are named after their inventors, such as Leibniz's notation, Legendre symbol, Einstein's summation convention, etc.

Typesetting

General typesetting systems are generally not well suited for mathematical notation. One of the reasons is that, in mathematical notation, the symbols are often arranged in two-dimensional figures, such as in:

    Mathematical Notation 

TeX is a mathematically oriented typesetting system that was created in 1978 by Donald Knuth. It is widely used in mathematics, through its extension called LaTeX, and is a de facto standard. (The above expression is written in LaTeX.)

More recently, another approach for mathematical typesetting is provided by MathML. However, it is not well supported in web browsers, which is its primary target.

International standard mathematical notation

The international standard ISO 80000-2 (previously, ISO 31-11) specifies symbols for use in mathematical equations. The standard requires use of italic fonts for variables (e.g., E=mc2) and roman (upright) fonts for mathematical constants (e.g., e or π).

Non-Latin-based mathematical notation

Modern Arabic mathematical notation is based mostly on the Arabic alphabet and is used widely in the Arab world, especially in pre-tertiary education.

(Western notation uses Arabic numerals, but the Arabic notation also replaces Latin letters and related symbols with Arabic script.)

In addition to Arabic notation, mathematics also makes use of Greek letters to denote a wide variety of mathematical objects and variables. On some occasions, certain Hebrew letters are also used (such as in the context of infinite cardinals).

Some mathematical notations are mostly diagrammatic, and so are almost entirely script independent. Examples are Penrose graphical notation and Coxeter–Dynkin diagrams.

Braille-based mathematical notations used by blind people include Nemeth Braille and GS8 Braille.

See also

References

Further reading

Tags:

Mathematical Notation SymbolsMathematical Notation ExpressionsMathematical Notation HistoryMathematical Notation International standard mathematical notationMathematical Notation Non-Latin-based mathematical notationMathematical Notation Further readingMathematical NotationConceptEngineeringExpression (mathematics)FormulaGlossary of mathematical symbolsMathematical objectMathematicsNumberOperation (mathematics)Property (philosophy)Relation (mathematics)Science

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Bella RamseyDeaths in 2023Raghav Chadha2022 FIFA World CupFarziLinuxEnglish WikipediaJack BlackMeryl StreepIan McShaneSwitzerlandCyprusHakuhō ShōBrian Cox (actor)Artificial intelligenceNew ZealandKaya StewartElton JohnLady GagaList of South Park episodesAvatar (2009 film)Rana NaiduOttoman EmpireSelena Gomez2022 Russian invasion of UkraineWomen's Premier League (cricket)Robin WilliamsDavid KoreshPakistanJulian NagelsmannBrock LesnarTom Hanks2026 FIFA World CupOpinion polling for the next United Kingdom general electionRaj Babbar2023 Israeli judicial reform protestsGmailHarry StylesJane FondaAnimalCoral CastleSarah ShahiErin DarkeRina SawayamaThe Banshees of InisherinInstagramNetherlandsEuropeMartin Luther King Jr.List of Marvel Cinematic Universe filmsDavid (Michelangelo)Rickey HendersonGermanyThe Hunger Games (film series)Jason SegelList of NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament Final Four participantsCharlotte FlairDisappearance of Madeleine McCannAmritpal SinghDave Stewart (musician and producer)Andre AgassiVal KilmerDiana, Princess of WalesAubrey PlazaBalagam (2023 film)Jayne MansfieldInternet Explorer 11Waco siegeAlia BhattXVideosBruce LeeEnglish languageDavid BowieMicrosoft Office MixLiv TylerSabrina Harman🡆 More