Adjusting the height of math floor symbol
The height of the floor symbol is inconsistent, it is smaller when the fraction contains a lowercase letter in the numerator and larger when the fraction contains numbers or uppercase letters
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The height of the floor symbol is inconsistent, it is smaller when the fraction contains a lowercase letter in the numerator and larger when the fraction contains numbers or uppercase letters
Integral containing floor function and derivative Ask Question Asked 2 years, 1 month ago Modified 2 years, 1 month ago
The correct answer is it depends how you define floor and ceil. You could define as shown here the more common way with always rounding downward or upward on the number line.
4 I suspect that this question can be better articulated as: how can we compute the floor of a given number using real number field operations, rather than by exploiting the printed notation, which
I disagree with the suggested dupe closure. In this question the point is what happens to the floor function when we subtract a small amount from an integer. On the other hand, in the
Is there a convenient way to typeset the floor or ceiling of a number, without needing to separately code the left and right parts? For example, is there some way to do $ceil{x}$ instead of
Integral concerning the floor function Ask Question Asked 1 year, 7 months ago Modified 1 year, 7 months ago
Is there a macro in latex to write ceil(x) and floor(x) in short form? The long form left lceil{x}right rceil is a bit lengthy to type every time it is used.
What are some real life application of ceiling and floor functions? Googling this shows some trivial applications.