- plus
- minus
- times
- divide
- divisible-by
- equal
- not-equal
- smaller-than
- greater-than
- smaller-or-equal
- greater-or-equal
- power
- square-root
- root
- ellipsis
- vertical-ellipsis
- pair
- tuple
- percent
- ratio
- repeating-decimal
- point
- gcd (greatest-common-divisor)
- lcd (least-common-denominator)
- absolute-value
- limit
lim
- tends-to
- defined-as (line defined via equation, e.g.
l : 2x + 1 = 0
) - index
- circled (used around
<mn>
numbers in "successive remainder" of a derivation) - imaginary-unit
- infinity
- evaluated-at
- partial-derivative
- first-derivative
- second-derivative
- third-derivative
- derivative
- differential
- open-interval
- closed-interval
- open-closed-interval
- closed-open-interval
- integral
- indefinite-integral
- definite-integral
- summation
- factorial
- combination
- probability
- set
- intersection
- union
- sine
- cosine
- tangent
- cotangent
- secant
- cosecant
- arcsine
- arccosine
- arctangent
- arccotangent
- arcsecant
- arccosecant
- hyperbolic-sine
- hyperbolic-cosine
- hyperbolic-tangent
- hyperbolic-cotangent
- hyperbolic-secant
- hyperbolic-cosecant
- ray
- directed-line-segment
- segment
- line
- angle
- inverse
- name (do we use
_($piece1,$piece2,...$piecen)
orname($piece1,...)
?) - logarithm
- natural-logarithm
- pi
- cross-product (vector-product)
- defined-as
- vector
- magnitude
- scalar-product (dot-product)
- polar-coordinate
- determinant
- binomial-coefficient
- congruent
- triple-of-direction-cosines (just triple?)
- floor
- ceiling
- euler-number
- Q: list-of-lists? e.g.
(1,6; 6,1; 2,5; 5,2; 3,4; 4,3)
- del-operator (used for gradient, diverge and curl, wiki)
- list-separator
- time-separator
- interval-separator
- where-separator (
:
such-that?)
- some uses of
↔
and→
which had unclear terminology, used in physics relationships- would have been
equilibrium
andyields
in chemistry - or potentially
if-and-only-if
andmaps-to
in mathematics - but I am not sure what the physics nomenclature is
- would have been
-
foot
ft
-
pound
lbs
-
radian
rad
-
meter
m
-
kilometer
km
-
centimeter
cm
-
hour
hr, h
-
year
yr
-
minute
min , ′
-
second
s, ′′
-
dollar
$
-
degree
°
-
kelvin
K
-
celsius
C
-
fahrenheit
F
-
mile
mi
-
east
E
-
west
W
-
north
N
-
south
S
-
per
s^{-1}
( "per second"? discussion) -
Appendix B: table of 24 unit conversions
-
Appendix C,E: physical constants
-
Greek prefixes:
- atto, femto, pico, nano, micro, milli, centi, deci, deka, hecto, kilo, mega, giga, tera, peta
- fermi
fm
- farad
F
- microfarad
μF
- coulomb
C
- volt
V
- kilovolt
kV
- ampere
A
- watt
W
- joule
J
- newton
N
- ohm
Ω
- hertz
Hz
- siemens
S
- henry
H
- milligram
mg
- microampere
mA
- atomic-mass
{}^{227} Ac
- isotope
C^{14}
- :quotient
- :system-of-equations
- Note: there is also a curious use of a matrix with a vertical border writing only the
coefficients in each
<tr>
, the rest being understood
- Note: there is also a curious use of a matrix with a vertical border writing only the
coefficients in each
- :group
- parentheticals? Or is it intent values of paren-group, bracket-group, brace-group,...
- :charge (e.g.
+q
in physics) - :permutation
- :matrix
- :chemical-formula
- :unit
There is software that may not generate wrapping mrows, but there are clear examples of software that already do generate wrapping mrows (latexml is one). So we ought to expect both, if they aren't clearly wrong uses of the spec.
To distill a complete motivating example, we'd need to answer if: