Quantity: Difference between revisions
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imported>Bruce M. Tindall mNo edit summary |
imported>David E. Volk (subpages mostly) |
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A quantity is a mathematical concept that refers to a certain number of identical units of an observed group of units, e.g., a certain amount of apples in a fruit basket. Identical quantities can be used as arguments of mathematical operators for adding, substracting, multiplying etc. | {{subpages}} | ||
A '''quantity''' is a mathematical concept that refers to a certain number of identical units of an observed group of units, e.g., a certain amount of apples in a fruit basket. Identical quantities can be used as arguments of mathematical operators for adding, substracting, multiplying etc. Quantities may be an abstract thought, such as '5x + 2' apples. |
Revision as of 11:16, 1 January 2008
A quantity is a mathematical concept that refers to a certain number of identical units of an observed group of units, e.g., a certain amount of apples in a fruit basket. Identical quantities can be used as arguments of mathematical operators for adding, substracting, multiplying etc. Quantities may be an abstract thought, such as '5x + 2' apples.