| Steven G. Krantz. A Primer of Mathematical Writing. American Mathematical Society, 1997. |
....mathematicians find a way to use the stylized mathematical language with a good taste. The art of writing good mathematical texts focuses at clearness and conciseness and not on an embellished style of expression. Fig. 1 shows some mathematical content in bad style and in good style (taken from [Kra97]) The good style version is not only easier to read for humans it is easier to parse for machines, too. Albeit those characteristics, all kinds of linguistic phenomena which can occur in other text sorts, show also up in textbook proofs. Bad: If g is positive, f is continuous, the domain ....
S.G. Krantz. A Primer of Mathematical Writing. American Mathematical Society, 1997.
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Steven G. Krantz. A Primer of Mathematical Writing. American Mathematical Society, 1997.
No context found.
Steven G. Krantz.<F4.745e+05> A Primer of Mathematical<F4.948e+05> Writing. American Mathematical Society, 1997.
No context found.
Steven G. Krantz. A Primer of Mathematical Writing. American Mathematical Society, 1997.
No context found.
Steven G. Krantz. A Primer of Mathematical Writing. American Mathematical Society, 1997.
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