Very standard for set-builder definitions such as: { form | condition } The abbreviation S.T. should also be fine. Slightly more infuriating is the upside down question mark. ¿Why is this necessary? And ¿what the Hell is Kristen trying to say (before totally disappearing into thin air? <<I am just a stranger to u, or well known. ¿Which is it ? In the middle path of nov 2 2020 seeing clearly at...¿Nothing too clearly ?¿¿ Maybe it's time to write ur own next vow for what YOU want >> Translation: “Congratulations on yr dissertation Brad! Yr homeless now.” Cheers, —Brad
On Dec 18, 2020, at 5:19 PM, Maximilian Hasler <Maximilian.Hasler@martinique.univ-ag.fr> wrote:
FWIW, I use (and suggest) latex : \mid for "such that".
On Fri, 18 Dec 2020, 15:22 Dan Asimov, <asimov@msri.org> wrote:
As an undergrad at MIT, I learned a math symbol that math profs there used often: a backwards pitchfork for "such that".
It was pretty handy and used often. I don't remember if I've ever seen it used elsewhere and don't think I've ever seen it in tables of math symbols. If you connect the dots and shrink the picture, it looks something like this:
_______________________________________________ math-fun mailing list math-fun@mailman.xmission.com https://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/math-fun