Lecture 3 Mathematics of Language and Symbols
Lecture 3 Mathematics of Language and Symbols
Lecture 3 Mathematics of Language and Symbols
The basic syntax for entering mathematical formulas or expressions in the systems enables you to quickly
enter using 2-D notation. The most common mistake is to forget parentheses “( )”. For example, the
expression:
1/(𝑥 + 1) is different from 1/𝑥 + 1 which the system interprets as (1/𝑥) + 1.
MATHEMATICS LANGUAGE AND SYMBOLS
Mathematical Expressions
Examples:
The use of expression ranges from the simple:
8x+5 (linear polynomial)
7x^2+4x-10 (quadratic polynomial)
(x-2)/(x^2+12) (rational fraction)
to the complex:
1/2π ∫_0^2π▒dθ/(a+b sin θ)
Symbol Meaning Example
+ Add 3 + 7 = 10
− Subtract 5−2=3
× Multiply 4 × 3 = 12
÷ Divide 20 ÷ 5 = 4
/ Divide 20/4 = 5
𝜋 Pi 𝐴 = 𝜋𝑟 2
∞ Infinity ∞ is endless
= Equals 3 + 7 = 10
≈ Approximately equal to 𝜋 ≈ 3.141592 …
≠ Not equal to 𝜋≠2
<, ≤ Less than to, less than or equal to 2<3
e) The difference of gross sales and total cost 𝑦 − 𝑐, where y is gross sales and c is
total cost
MATHEMATICS LANGUAGE AND SYMBOLS
Mathematical Sentence
Mathematical Convention
1. 4 − 2 − 7 − 4 + (11 − 8)
2. 25 − 7 3 − 2 18 − 16 + 5
3. 2 −4 − 6 + 3 + (7 − 1 + 8 + 12 − 3 + 5
4. −5 − −2 + 6 − 8 4 − 7 − 4 − 2 + 2 − 1
5. 4− 8 2+6 +7 −5 +2