Absolute value
From Maths
Revision as of 18:15, 18 March 2016 by Alec (Talk | contribs) (Marked page dire, added requires-references tag)
This page is a dire page and is in desperate need of an update.
The message is:
Need of update, standardisation of layout, link to triangle inequality, link to norm of reals, link to metric spaces
(Unknown grade)
This page requires references, it is on a to-do list for being expanded with them.
Please note that this does not mean the content is unreliable, it just means that the author of the page doesn't have a book to hand, or remember the book to find it, which would have been a suitable reference.
The message provided is:
The message provided is:
Content is correct, but unreferenced
The absolute value is sometimes called "abs"
Definition
The absolute value is a function [math]|\cdot|:\mathbb{R}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}[/math] given by:
[math]|x|=\left\{\begin{array}{lr} x & x\ge 0\\ -x & \text{otherwise} \end{array}\right.[/math]
It simply returns the positive value of a number.
Note
More strictly the function should be given as: [math]|\cdot|:\mathbb{R}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}_{\ge 0}[/math]
Examples
- [math]|-2|=2[/math]
- [math]|2|=2[/math]
- [math]|0|=0[/math]