Tuesday, March 27, 2012

decisions, decisions vs. conventions, conventions ..

a few minutes ago [1] i was latexing and realised that i needed another name for a function .. yet i had already used f, g, and h ..

argh ..

i can't just call it f' ("f prime") either, because i already used (prime) for differentiation of functions on the real line .. and f0 just looks .. weird:  

i mean, what's the subscript for?

[runs through alphabet]
[sighs]

i guess i'll use u;
it feels the least strange, to me.

the greek letter φ is close to f, but it looks too much like a smooth, compactly-supported function for my taste ..



odd, how some conventions become crippling.  to me, for instance,
  • a and b are points or parameters (or very rarely, indices)
  • c is a constant,
  • d is the exterior differential,
  • e is base e (and occasionally an embedding*)
  • f, g, and h are functions,
  • i, j, k are indices (with i sometimes the inclusion map [2])
  • l denotes a line,
  • m and n are natural numbers,
  • o is a base point in a space*
  • p and q are either points, exponents, or polynomials,
  • r is the radius of a ball (occasionally a third polynomial),
  • s and t are parametrisation variables,
  • u and v are vectorfields,
  • w is a weight function*
  • x, y, and z are spatial variables.
as for uppercase letters,
  • A is a matrix, sometimes a constant,
  • B is a ball,
  • C is a constant, subject to change, line by line,
  • D is the total derivative map,
  • E is the base space for a fibre bundle,
  • F and G are mappings between spaces,
  • H is used for homology,
  • I is the identity map,
  • J is used for jacobians,
  • K is a distorsion function for quasiconformal mappings*
  • L is a linear operator, or a space of integrable functions,
  • M and N denote sobolev spaces of functions* (on metric spaces)
  • O is an open set,
  • P is .. an affine hyperplane?  (i rarely use this: huh ..)
  • Q is a cube,
  • R is the larger of two radii,
  • S is a symmetric tensor,
  • T is a linear operator between normed linear spaces,
  • U is a unitary operator,
  • V and W are vector spaces,
  • X, Y, and Z are spaces.
and, of course, greek:
  • α and β are multi-indices,
  • γ is a curve,
  • δ and ε are small numbers,
  • ζ is an embedding [2]
  • η is a standard, smooth mollifier,
  • θ is an angle,
  • ι is the inclusion map,
  • κ denotes curvature,
  • λ is an eigenvalue,
  • μ and ν are measures,
  • ξ are coordinates on a differentiable structure* (or a phase space variable)
  • ο looks too much like an o, so it's still a base point,
  • π is either a projection map or a homotopy group,
  • ρ is the density function to an absolutely continuous measure,
  • σ is surface area measure,
  • τ is a dummy variable for integration,
  • υ, i never use, though Υ is used for jets* (a la viscosity solutions for PDE)
  • φ and ψ are test functions,
  • χ is a characteristic (indicator) function,
  • ω is a solid angle.



[1] .. and yes, clearly i'm blogging now. q-:

[2] i don't do complex analysis unless absolutely necessary.

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous10:05 AM

    You could use capital greek letters such as Gamma, Delta, Sigma, Pi, Lambda, and Omega. Wait, can't use those either. About the only thing left is the Batman symbol.

    ReplyDelete