[Cfp-interest 3052] Re: What words mean 0 < x < INFINITY
Jerome Coonen
jcoonen at gmail.com
Fri Mar 15 20:32:59 PDT 2024
Damian, I provided examples from a draft at hand illustrate specifications
free of the English language subtleties of "mathematically positive" vs.
"strictly positive" vs. ... The example with variable y was from atan2() in
Annex F.
Sometimes you just need to nail the sign bit, but that's rare.
-Jerome Coonen
650.996.4738
jcoonen at gmail.com
On Fri, Mar 15, 2024 at 6:15 PM Damian McGuckin <damianm at esi.com.au> wrote:
> On Sat, 16 Mar 2024, Damian McGuckin wrote:
>
> > Jerome, I think you are suggesting
> >
> > finite x != 0
> > and
> > finite positive-signed x
> > and
> > finite x > 0
> >
> > for the last three as I did not see 'atan2' (I only looked in Annex G)
>
> Some of the above involved the variable 'y'
>
> Anyway I reworked Annex G with these and The mathematics is very clear!
> Much clearer and cleaner in fact
>
> Thanks - Damian
>
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