Absolute valueIn mathematics, the absolute value (or modulus) of a number is that number without a negative sign. So, for example, 3 is the absolute value of both 3 and −3.
DefinitionIt can be defined as follows: For any real number a, the absolute value of a, denoted |a|, is equal to a if a ≥ 0, and to −a, if a < 0 (see also: inequality). |a| is never negative, as absolute values are always either positive or zero. Put another way, |a| < 0 has no solution for a. The absolute value can be regarded as the distance of a number from zero; indeed the notion of distance in mathematics is a generalisation of the properties of the absolute value. When real numbers are considered as one-dimensional vectors, the absolute value is the magnitude, and the p-norm for any p. Up to a constant factor, every norm in R1 is equal to the absolute value: ||x||=||1||.|x| PropertiesThe absolute value has the following properties:
The last two properties are often used in solving inequalities; for example:
For real arguments, the absolute value function f(x) = |x| is continuous everywhere and differentiable everywhere except for x = 0. For complex arguments, the function is continuous everywhere but differentiable nowhere (One way to see this is to show that it does not obey the Cauchy-Riemann equations). For a complex number z = a + ib, one defines the absolute value or modulus to be |z| = √(a2 + b2) = √ (z z*) (see square root and complex conjugate). This notion of absolute value shares the properties 1-6 from above. If one interprets z as a point in the plane, then |z| is the distance of z to the origin. It is useful to think of the expression |x − y| as the distance between the two numbers x and y (on the real number line if x and y are real, and in the complex plane if x and y are complex). By using this notion of distance, both the set of real numbers and the set of complex numbers become metric spaces. The function is not invertible, because a negative and a positive number have the same absolute value. Absolute value and complex numbers
AlgorithmIf the absolute value would not be a standard function Abs in Pascal it could be easily computed using the following code: program absolute_value; var n: integer; begin read (n); if n < 0 then n := -n; writeln (n) end. In the C programming language, the int abs(int i)
{
if (i < 0)
return -i;
else
return i;
}
The floating-point versions are trickier, as they have to contend with special codes for infinity and not-a-numbers.
de:Absoluter Betrag es:Valor absoluto fr:Valeur absolue is:Algildi ja:絶対値 nl:Absolute waarde pl:Wartość bezwzględna sv:Absolutbelopp zh:绝对值 Categories: Numeration |
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