B bos1234 Member Joined Oct 9, 2006 Messages 491 Gender Male HSC 2007 Nov 10, 2006 #1 its like a E turned around// b E R R is the real number.. what does the E stand for
P pLuvia Guest Nov 10, 2006 #2 I'm not sure about the latin word but it means, "for all" So for bER it would be "b is all real numbers" Last edited by a moderator: Nov 10, 2006
I'm not sure about the latin word but it means, "for all" So for bER it would be "b is all real numbers"
M modezero Member Joined Oct 9, 2005 Messages 40 Gender Male HSC 2006 Nov 10, 2006 #3 reverse E means "there exists" upside down A means "for all"
B bos1234 Member Joined Oct 9, 2006 Messages 491 Gender Male HSC 2007 Nov 10, 2006 #4 wait u guys are saying different things...one is saying.. there exits.. the other is saying for all... Last edited: Nov 10, 2006
wait u guys are saying different things...one is saying.. there exits.. the other is saying for all...
A acmilan I'll stab ya Joined May 24, 2004 Messages 3,989 Location Jumanji Gender Male HSC N/A Nov 11, 2006 #6 lawl <3 logic
Slidey But pieces of what? Joined Jun 12, 2004 Messages 6,600 Gender Male HSC 2005 Nov 11, 2006 #7 (∃ε < 0) Hahaha!
M Mumma Member Joined May 19, 2004 Messages 586 Location Sydney Gender Male HSC 2006 Nov 11, 2006 #8 ummm... Yes.
R Riviet . Joined Oct 11, 2005 Messages 5,593 Gender Undisclosed HSC N/A Nov 11, 2006 #9 Slidey said: (∃ε < 0) Hahaha! Click to expand...
Slidey But pieces of what? Joined Jun 12, 2004 Messages 6,600 Gender Male HSC 2005 Nov 11, 2006 #10 It's an age-old maths joke; "assume epsilon < 0". Granted, mine translates more to "assume there exists some epsiolon < 0", but either way the idiocy is inherent.
It's an age-old maths joke; "assume epsilon < 0". Granted, mine translates more to "assume there exists some epsiolon < 0", but either way the idiocy is inherent.
KeypadSDM B4nn3d Joined Apr 9, 2003 Messages 2,631 Location Sydney, Inner West Gender Male HSC 2003 Nov 12, 2006 #11 b E R makes no sense at all, unless E isn't the backwards E, but the "element of" E. Even if you append something before the b, saying "There exists 'The Reals'" is trivially true (well nearly trivially), and more confusing that useful.
b E R makes no sense at all, unless E isn't the backwards E, but the "element of" E. Even if you append something before the b, saying "There exists 'The Reals'" is trivially true (well nearly trivially), and more confusing that useful.
Slidey But pieces of what? Joined Jun 12, 2004 Messages 6,600 Gender Male HSC 2005 Nov 12, 2006 #12 Not knowing what it means or how to use it, he probably typed it from memory and in fact meant to type "There exists a b which is in R".
Not knowing what it means or how to use it, he probably typed it from memory and in fact meant to type "There exists a b which is in R".