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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Interpretations  





2 Typography  





3 Similar graphemes  





4 See also  





5 Notes  





6 References  














Turnstile (symbol)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Inmathematical logic and computer science the symbol ⊢ () has taken the name turnstile because of its resemblance to a typical turnstile if viewed from above. It is also referred to as tee and is often read as "yields", "proves", "satisfies" or "entails".

Interpretations[edit]

The turnstile represents a binary relation. It has several different interpretations in different contexts:

can then be read
I know A is true.[2]
In the same vein, a conditional assertion
can be read as:
From P, I know that Q
means that Q is derivable from P in the system.
Consistent with its use for derivability, a『⊢』followed by an expression without anything preceding it denotes a theorem, which is to say that the expression can be derived from the rules using an empty setofaxioms. As such, the expression
means that Q is a theorem in the system.
means that Sisprovable from T.[4] This usage is demonstrated in the article on propositional calculus. The syntactic consequence of provability should be contrasted to semantic consequence, denoted by the double turnstile symbol . One says that is a semantic consequence of , or , when all possible valuations in which is true, is also true. For propositional logic, it may be shown that semantic consequence and derivability are equivalent to one-another. That is, propositional logic is sound ( implies ) and complete ( implies )[5]

Typography[edit]

InTeX, the turnstile symbol is obtained from the command \vdash.

InUnicode, the turnstile symbol () is called right tack and is at code point U+22A2.[15] (Code point U+22A6 is named assertion sign ().)

On a typewriter, a turnstile can be composed from a vertical bar (|) and a dash (–).

InLaTeX there is a turnstile package which issues this sign in many ways, and is capable of putting labels below or above it, in the correct places.[16]

Similar graphemes[edit]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Martin-Löf 1996, pp. 6, 15
  • ^ Martin-Löf 1996, p. 15
  • ^ "Chapter 6, Formal Language Theory" (PDF).
  • ^ Troelstra & Schwichtenberg 2000
  • ^ Dirk van Dalen, Logic and Structure (1980), Springer, ISBN 3-540-20879-8. See Chapter 1, section 1.5.
  • ^ "Peter Selinger, Lecture Notes on the Lambda Calculus" (PDF).
  • ^ Schmidt 1994
  • ^ "adjoint functor in nLab". ncatlab.org.
  • ^ @FunctorFact (5 July 2016). "Functor Fact on Twitter" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  • ^ "A Dictionary of APL". www.jsoftware.com.
  • ^ Iverson 1987
  • ^ Stanley, Richard P. (1999). Enumerative Combinatorics. Vol. 2 (1st ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 287.
  • ^ fx-92 Spéciale Collège Mode d'emploi (PDF). Casio. 2015. p. 12.
  • ^ "Remainder Calculations - Casio fx-92B User Manual [Page 13] | ManualsLib". www.manualslib.com. Retrieved 2020-12-24.
  • ^ "Unicode standard" (PDF).
  • ^ "CTAN: /tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/turnstile". ctan.org.
  • References[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Turnstile_(symbol)&oldid=1216734838"

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