rusi writes: > On Dec 15, 3:58 pm, Chris Angelico wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 15, 2011 at 9:47 PM, Robert Kern wrote: > > > 42 = 2 mod 5 > > > 2 = 42 mod 5 > > > > It might make more sense to programmers if you think of it as > > written: > > > > 42 = 2, mod 5 > > 2 = 42, mod 5 > > > > ChrisA > > For the record I should say that the guy who taught me abstract > algebra, said about as much: > He said that the notation > a == b mod n > should be written as > a ==n b > (read the == as 3 horizontal lines and the n as a subscript)
I think the modulus is usually given in parentheses and preferably some whitespace: in text, a == b (mod n), using == for the triple -, and in a display: a == b (mod n). I think even a == b == c (mod n), without repeating the modulus every time. (A subscript sounds good if the modulus is simple. Perhaps it often is.) That way it does not even look like a binary operator. I think Graham, Knuth, and Patashnik play it nicely in their book Concrete Mathematics, where they have both mods: the congruence relation, and the binary operator. The book is targeted for computer scientists. As if mathematicians didn't use the exact same notations for different purposes, even in the same context, and often with no problems whatsoever as long as all parties happen to know what they are talking about. Often the uses are analogous, but at least the two main uses of (x,y) differ wildly. (So Knuth uses (x .. y) for the interval, but he is a programmer.) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list