Equal sign
| = | |
|---|---|
| Mathematical signs | |
| arithmetic | |
| Plus sign | + | 
| Minus sign | - , ./. | 
| Mark | ⋅ , × | 
| Divided sign | : , ÷ , / | 
| Plus minus sign | ± , ∓ | 
| Comparison sign | < , ≤ , = , ≥ , > | 
| Root sign | √ | 
| Percent sign | % | 
| Analysis | |
| Sum symbol | Σ | 
| Product mark | Π | 
| Difference sign , Nabla | ∆ , ∇ | 
| Prime | ′ | 
| Partial differential | ∂ | 
| Integral sign | ∫ | 
| Concatenation characters | ∘ | 
| Infinity symbol | ∞ | 
| geometry | |
| Angle sign | ∠ , ∡ , ∢ , ∟ | 
| Vertical , parallel | ⊥ , ∥ | 
| Triangle , square | △ , □ | 
| Diameter sign | ⌀ | 
| Set theory | |
| Union , cut | ∪ , ∩ | 
| Difference , complement | ∖ , ∁ | 
| Element character | ∈ | 
| Subset , superset | ⊂ , ⊆ , ⊇ , ⊃ | 
| Empty set | ∅ | 
| logic | |
| Follow arrow | ⇒ , ⇔ , ⇐ | 
| Universal quantifier | ∀ | 
| Existential quantifier | ∃ | 
| Conjunction , disjunction | ∧ , ∨ | 
| Negation sign | ¬ | 
In mathematics , formal logic and in the exact natural sciences , the equal sign ( = , also called is-equal sign ) stands between two expressions with the same value .
history
 
  In ancient and medieval mathematics, the equality of two expressions was still literally written down (e.g. est egale for "is equal"). Descartes (1596–1650) shortened this with a æ (for Latin aequalis ) rotated by 180 ° , with the horizontal line being more and more omitted in the subsequent period. This symbol survived in the form ∝ as one of the proportionality symbols . As the founder of modern equal sign the Welsh mathematician applies Robert Recorde (1510-1558) with his book The Whetstone of Witte , dt (1557). The whetstone of knowledge . He justified the two parallel lines for an equality symbol with the early New English sentence … bicause noe.2.thynges, can be moare equalle. (Today's English: because no two things can be more equal , " because no two things can be the same").
The =, which was already used in England , was probably first introduced on the European continent by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646–1716).
presentation
The equal sign is coded in ASCII with 61 ( decimal ), so as Unicode U + 003D (61 decimal = 3D hexadecimal ). It is not one of the named entities in markup languages , but can be replaced with =or in HTML =.
use
General use
The glyph = is generally used to represent facts of correspondence, equality or identity , in mathematics, computer science and technology also the assignment in the sense of a subsequent equal use.
The equal sign is often used as a substitute for the double hyphen ⹀ (U + 2E40) or its Japanese variant (U + 30A0).
In electrical engineering , the equal sign is used to identify direct voltage .
The equal sign and its variations
There are also modified forms with a different meaning, such as B. the equivalent sign (≙) or the rounding sign ( ≈) with the meaning approximately equal / rounded . If the inequality of two numbers is to be shown, a crossed out equal sign (≠) is used. A shape with three horizontal bars (≡) is used to indicate the identity of two arithmetic expressions.
The modifications: = or =: are used in mathematics to represent a definition of one side by the other side. The colons are always next to the object to be defined. The ≡ previously used for this should no longer be used in this sense ( DIN 1302 ), but shapes such as (DIN 1302) or ( ISO 31 -11) are possible.
For example, the set A can be defined as follows:
In programming languages that are derived from C , the (simple) equal sign is used for value assignment . In these languages, however, a double equal sign ( == ) is usually used as the comparison operator . In Fortran is used for the comparison operator. In languages of the Pascal family, on the other hand, a: = is used for the assignment (in the predecessor Algol 60 this character combination or also a "←") and the equal sign as a comparison operator. There are also languages such as B. BASIC , in which it is always clear from the context whether it is an assignment or a comparison and therefore use the equal sign for both the assignment and the comparison operator.
.EQ.
Inequality sign
Since the character for inequality ≠ is not available in the ASCII character set, various programming languages use digraphs such as <>(Pascal, BASIC), /=(Ada), !=( not equal , C, C ++) or ~=(ML); Fortran used .NE.(because of English n ot e qual , not equal ).
| Z. | Unicode | meaning | description | Z. | Unicode | meaning | description | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| = | U+003D | equal | ≠ | U+2260 | unequal; not equal (1) | |||
| ≡ | U+2261 | congruent , identical | ≢ | U+2262 | not congruent (1) | |||
| ≐ | U+2250 | Limit value approximation | ||||||
| ≃ | U+2243 | asymptotically equal | ≄ | U+2244 | asymptotically unequal (1) | |||
| ≂ | U+2242 | Minus tildes | ||||||
| ≅ | U+2245 | approximately equal (Anglo-American, according to DIN only permissible for asymptotically equal (≃)) | ≆ | U+2246 | roughly, but not exactly the same | |||
| ≇ | U+2247 | neither roughly nor exactly the same | ||||||
| isomorphic , isomorphic in terms of category theory | ||||||||
| ≊ | U+224A | about the same or equal | ||||||
| ≈ | U+2248 | roughly equal / rounded ( coll .: almost equal ) | Double tilde | ≉ | U+2249 | not about the same (coll .: not almost the same ) | Crossed out double tildes | |
| ≋ | U+224B | Triple tilde | ||||||
| ≗ | U+2257 | about the same | ||||||
| ≒ | U+2252 | roughly the same or picture | ≓ | U+2253 | Picture or about the same | |||
| ≌ | U+224C | all the same | ||||||
| ≍ | U+224D | equivalent to | ||||||
| ≣ | U+2263 | exactly equivalent | ||||||
| ≎ | U+224E | geometrically equivalent | ||||||
| ≏ | U+224F | Difference between | ||||||
| ≑ | U+2251 | geometrically the same | ||||||
| ≚ | U+225A | equiangular | ||||||
| ≔ | U+2254 | results from (for definition on the left (: =) not provided) | ≕ | U+2255 | does not result from (for definition on the right (= :) not provided) | |||
| ≜ | U+225C | right by definition | ||||||
| ≝ | U+225D | |||||||
| Definition on the left | Colon + equal sign | Right-hand definition | Equal sign + colon | |||||
| should be the same (for example in the introduction of evidence ) | ||||||||
| ≙ | U+2259 | corresponds | ||||||
| ≘ | U+2258 | corresponds to (unusual) | ||||||
| ≞ | U+225E | measured | ||||||
| ≟ | U+225F | maybe right away | ||||||
| ≛ | U+225B | Star is the same | ||||||
| ≖ | U+2256 | Circle in equal sign | 
- (1) DIN 1302prescribes vertical strikethrough, but allows oblique strikethrough "if it is necessary for reasons of composition technology". ISO 31generally allows both forms.
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ ... and written “is equal sign”; see also in the DWDS , under the equal sign , there also with "actual equal sign" (accessed on November 15, 2018)
- ^ Robert Recorde : The Whetstone of Witte . London 1557, p. 238.
- ↑ Matthias Helle: = . In: FU Berlin, Institute for Computer Science (Ed.): Seminar History of Mathematical Notation . 1999 (fu-berlin.de; script for the lecture on July 21, 1999).
- ↑ a b Hans Friedrich Ebel , Claus Bliefert , Walter Greulich : Writing and publishing in the natural sciences . Wiley-VCH, 2006, ISBN 978-3-527-30802-6 , 6.5.4 Frequently occurring special characters , p. 352 ff . ( limited preview in Google Book search).


