Parentheses are overused

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Revision as of 19:28, 2 July 2021 by David Eppstein (talk | contribs) (or binomial coefficients)
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Parentheses are used to represent all sorts of operations and objects, many of which conflict with each other.

Grouping parts of an expression: \( (x+1)(x+2) \)

Argument of a function: \(f(x)\) is "\(f\) applied to \(x\)". (There is no function application symbol)

Greatest common divisor: \((a,b) = \gcd(a,b)\)

Counting combinations: \( {n \choose k} = \frac{n!}{k!(n-k)!} \)

Repeated differentiation : \( f^{(n)}(x) = \frac{\mathrm{d}^nf}{\mathrm{d}x^n} \)

Vectors or one-column matrices or binomial coefficients: \( \begin{pmatrix} a \\ b \end{pmatrix} \)

Ideals: \((2)\) is the ideal generated by 2, \((a,b,c)\) is the ideal generated by \(\{a,b,c\}\).