This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Multiplication sign" โ news ยท newspapers ยท books ยท scholar ยท JSTOR (January 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
| ร | |
|---|---|
Multiplication sign | |
| In Unicode | U+00D7 ร MULTIPLICATION SIGN (×) |
| Different from | |
| Different from | U+0078 x LATIN SMALL LETTER X |
| Related | |
| See also | U+22C5 โ
DOT OPERATOR U+00F7 รท DIVISION SIGN |
The multiplication sign (ร), also known as the times sign or the dimension sign, is a mathematical symbol used to denote the operation of multiplication, which results in a product.[1]
The symbol is also used in botany, in botanical hybrid names.
The form is properly a four-fold rotationally symmetric saltire.[2] The multiplication sign ร is similar to a lowercase X (x).
History
[edit]The earliest known use of the ร symbol to indicate multiplication appears in an anonymous appendix to the 1618 edition of John Napier's Mirifici Logarithmorum Canonis Descriptio.[3] This appendix has been attributed to William Oughtred,[3] who used the same symbol in his 1631 algebra text, Clavis Mathematicae, stating:
Multiplication of species [i.e. unknowns] connects both proposed magnitudes with the symbol 'in' or ร: or ordinarily without the symbol if the magnitudes be denoted with one letter.[4]
Other works have been identified in which crossed diagonals appear in diagrams involving multiplied numbers, such as Robert Recorde's The Ground of Arts[5][6] and Oswald Schreckenfuchs's 1551 edition of Almagest, but these are not symbolizations.[3]
Uses
[edit]In mathematics, the symbol ร has a number of uses, including
- Multiplication of two numbers, where it is read as "times" or "multiplied by"[1]
- Cross product of two vectors, where it is usually read as "cross"
- Cartesian product of two sets, where it is usually read as "cross"[7]
- Geometric dimension of an object, such as noting that a room is 10 feet ร 12 feet in area, where it is usually read as "by" (e.g., "10 feet by 12 feet")
- Display resolution in pixels, such as 1920 pixels across ร 1080 pixels down. Read as "by".
- Dimensions of a matrix, where it is usually read as "by"
- A statistical interaction between two explanatory variables, where it is usually read as "by"
- the optical magnification is sometimes referred to as "power" (for example "10ร power")
In biology, the multiplication sign is used in a botanical hybrid name, for instance Ceanothus papillosus ร impressus (a hybrid between C. papillosus and C. impressus) or Crocosmia ร crocosmiiflora (a hybrid between two other species of Crocosmia). However, the communication of these hybrid names with a Latin letter "x" is common, especially when the actual "ร" symbol is not readily available.
The multiplication sign is also used by historians for an event between two dates. When employed between two dates โ for example 1225 and 1232 โ the expression "1225ร1232" means "no earlier than 1225 and no later than 1232".[8]
A monadic ร symbol is used by the APL programming language to denote the sign function.
Similar notations
[edit]The lower-case Latin letter x is sometimes used in place of the multiplication sign. This is considered incorrect in mathematical writing.[citation needed]
In algebraic notation, widely used in mathematics, a multiplication symbol is usually omitted wherever it would not cause confusion: "a multiplied by b" can be written as ab or aโb.[1]
Other symbols can also be used to denote multiplication, often to reduce confusion between the multiplication sign ร and the common variable x. In some countries, such as Germany, the primary symbol for multiplication is the "dot operator" โ (as in aโ b). This symbol is also used in compound units of measurement, e.g., Nโ m (see International System of Units ยง Lexicographic conventions). In algebra, it is a notation to resolve ambiguity (for instance, "b times 2" may be written as bโ 2, to avoid being confused with a value called b2). This notation is used wherever multiplication should be written explicitly, such as in "ab = aโ 2 for b = 2"; this usage is also seen in English-language texts. In some languages, the use of full stop as a multiplication symbol, such as a.b, is common when the symbol for decimal point is comma.
Historically, computer language syntax was restricted to the ASCII character set, and the asterisk * became the de facto symbol for the multiplication operator. This selection is reflected in the numeric keypad on English-language keyboards, where the arithmetic operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication and division are represented by the keys , , and , respectively.
Unicode and HTML entities
[edit]- U+00D7 ร MULTIPLICATION SIGN (×)
Other variants and related characters:
- U+002A * ASTERISK (*, *)
- U+2217 โ ASTERISK OPERATOR (∗)
- U+2062 INVISIBLE TIMES (⁢, ⁢) (a zero-width space indicating multiplication; The invisible times codepoint is used in mathematical type-setting to indicate the multiplication of two terms without a visible multiplication operator, e.g. when type-setting 2x (the multiplication of the number 2 and the variable x), the invisible times codepoint can be inserted in-between: 2 <U+2062> x )
- U+00B7 ยท MIDDLE DOT (·, ·, ·) (the interpunct, may be easier to type than the dot operator)
- U+2297 โ CIRCLED TIMES (⊗, ⊗)
- U+22C5 โ DOT OPERATOR (⋅)
- U+2715 โ MULTIPLICATION X
- U+2716 โ HEAVY MULTIPLICATION X
- U+2A09 โจ N-ARY TIMES OPERATOR
- U+2A2F โจฏ VECTOR OR CROSS PRODUCT (⨯) (intended to explicitly denote the cross product of two vectors)
- U+2A30 โจฐ MULTIPLICATION SIGN WITH DOT ABOVE (⨰)
- U+2A31 โจฑ MULTIPLICATION SIGN WITH UNDERBAR (⨱)
- U+2A34 โจด MULTIPLICATION SIGN IN LEFT HALF CIRCLE (⨴)
- U+2A35 โจต MULTIPLICATION SIGN IN RIGHT HALF CIRCLE (⨵)
- U+2A36 โจถ CIRCLED MULTIPLICATION SIGN WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT (⨶)
- U+2A37 โจท MULTIPLICATION SIGN IN DOUBLE CIRCLE (⨷)
- U+2A3B โจป MULTIPLICATION SIGN IN TRIANGLE (⨻)
- U+2AC1 โซ SUBSET WITH MULTIPLICATION SIGN BELOW (⫁)
- U+2AC2 โซ SUPERSET WITH MULTIPLICATION SIGN BELOW (⫂)
See also
[edit]- Division sign
- List of mathematical symbols
- Plus and minus signs
- Reference mark
- Unicode input โ Input characters using their Unicode code points (a general guide to entering "off-keyboard" symbols).
- X mark โ Symbol with multiple meanings
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Weisstein, Eric W. "Multiplication". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-26.
- ^ Stallings, L. (2000). "A Brief History of Algebraic Notation". School Science and Mathematics. 100 (5): 230โ235. doi:10.1111/j.1949-8594.2000.tb17262.x. ISSN 0036-6803.
- ^ a b c Cajori, Florian (1928). A History of Mathematical Notations, Volume I: Notations in Elementary Mathematics. Open Court. pp. 251โ252.
- ^ William Oughtred (1667). Clavis Mathematicae. p. 10.
Multiplicatio speciosa connectit utramque magintudinem propositam cum notรข in vel ร: vel plerumque absque notรข, si magnitudines denotentur unica litera
- ^ Recorde, Robert (1618). The Ground of Arts. London: John Beale.
- ^ The diagonals do not appear in the original 1543 edition, leaving their priority to Oughtred uncertain.
- ^ Nykamp, Duane. "Cartesian product definition". Math Insight. Retrieved August 26, 2020.
- ^ New Hart's rules: the handbook of style for writers and editors, Oxford University Press, 2005, p. 183, ISBN 978-0-19-861041-0
External links
[edit]- "Letter Database". Eki.ee. Retrieved 2017-01-13.
- "Unicode Character 'MULTIPLICATION SIGN' (U+00D7)". Fileformat.info. Retrieved 2017-01-13.
- "Unicode Character 'VECTOR OR CROSS PRODUCT' (U+2A2F)". Fileformat.info. Retrieved 2017-01-13.
